'This is complete nonsense': Scientists rail against 'alien' bodies shown before Mexican congress (www.livescience.com)
Scientists blast claims of two 'alien' bodies that a journalist presented to Mexico's congress.
This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.
Scientists blast claims of two 'alien' bodies that a journalist presented to Mexico's congress.
There is a sudden increase in aggressive raccoon attacks in Portland this August as well as an increase in overdose deaths. Hmmmmm. Here is a video of a Portland man fighting a raccoon with a wooden pallet, where the raccoon seems unafraid...
The giraffe born without spots on July 31 is the only one of her kind on Earth, zoo officials stated Monday.
A much anticipated NASA report on UFOs calls for better tracking and scientific understanding of unexplained phenomena that captivate the public and have raised concerns about military security.
Fake information shakes down social media. It's been a very busy week!
Researchers have found that anti-bird spikes are being co-opted for pro-bird purposes: They’re showing up as building materials in nests.
I check in with the happenings at Loch Ness. Also, new dino tracks exposed, another ice fall, weird noises plague homes, a planned UAP reporting site, and much more weirdness this week.
A group representing L. Ron Hubbard asked the Copyright Office to alter a repair exemption that makes it legal to hack Scientology's E-Meter—and lots of other electronics, too.
The bear grabs, then eats, a small bag of five-cent gummy bears
In April 2018, the underwater photographer Ryo Minemizu watched as a creature the size of a ladybug bobbed around 50 feet underwater off the shores of Okinawa, Japan. The thing resembled a jellyfish, a yolk-like center with trailing, wispy tentacles. Minemizu posted photos of the creature to social media, but no one could...
The “lung float” test claims to help determine if a baby was born alive or dead, but many medical examiners say it’s too unreliable. Yet the test is still being used to bring murder charges — and get convictions.
They heard it, felt it, and a couple of people even said a "loud boom" rattled their homes in West Valley, but an explanation on a cause for the boom was a bust
It's a hot one. This edition is chock-full of strange news stories - record heat, drought, strange animal discoveries, weird crimes, many mysteries.
A wild game processor found the three-point deer antler stuck in the mouth of an 11-foot alligator that some hunters had brought in.
Calling all Extraterrestrial enthusiasts! For almost 100 years, scientists, experts, and average homeowners have shared stories and video clips...
Some visitors to Fresh Pond in Cambridge claim to have spotted a mysterious creature out in the water, which they’ve dubbed the “Loch Fresh Monster.” But Cambridge officials say they can explain what it is.
Woman dies after consuming chocolate she received from a mysterious palm reader who predicted that she'd die in a few days.
The alleged leader is accused of illegally harvesting kidneys from more than 300 people in Pakistan.
The female orca was found far from her normal hunting ground with six whole sea otters in its stomach and one lodged between its oral cavity and the esophagus.
The Perseverance rover has captured footage of an unusually large twister, or "dust devil," moving across the Martian landscape. Based on images of the swirling storm, researchers estimate that it could be more than a mile tall.
An Iowa woman who makes jewelry out of animal droppings tried to bring giraffe feces back from an African safari. It was destroyed after being intercepted during a customs check at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.
Scientists are puzzled by 5,000-year-old bear bones found on the Unalaska and Amaknak Islands in the Aleutians, Alaska. The ancient bones have been a decades-old mystery due to the fact that bears have never lived on those islands.