Friday November 20, 2009
I would like for you to check out a report sent to me by one of our readers. The case concerns the sighting of unknown lights by her brother and two other men while on a hunting trip in the Dakotas. Their sighting is strange enough, but that's not all that happened that night.
About 45 minutes from their sighting, three college women who were doing some star gazing of their own, were found dead in their sport utility vehicle ten feet under a farmer's pond. Are these two cases related?
Check out all the details at Strange Event in the Dakotas, and tell us what you think.
Thursday November 19, 2009
Welcome to another session of UFO sighting reports. This week we have several very detailed reports to show you. An amateur astronomer reports an unknown object in Arizona. A Colorado man reports a half dozen bright, flat objects.
A man and wife from New Mexico see a large, gray object which has a near miss with a plane, and our last report comes from Texas, where a man and his son see a red object, stationary in the sky.
Check out the full length reports of these at UFO Sighting Reports, 11-19-09, and don't forget to keep your eyes on the skies.
Wednesday November 18, 2009
Another UFO video that has gained some popularity lately is one submitted from Argentina. The video supposedly shows one glowing object in the night skies of South Quadrant on 09-28-09.
The video has dimension to it, but you have to be patient, as the 06:29 minute video has some redundancy. I think you will find it worth the wait.
Check this one out at UFO from Argentina, and give us your opinion.
Monday November 16, 2009
We now have another report that they have found water on the moon. Not just a little water, but a lot. NASA spokesmen used the term, "significant," when describing the water content.
This discovery came about when the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, or LCROSS, intentionally crashed October 9 into the permanently shadowed region of Cabeus crater near the moon's south pole.
After the bombing, a rocket flew through the aftermath of the event, and measured the water content. Other data was also collected during the 79 million dollar mission.
"The discovery opens a new chapter in our understanding of the moon," the space agency said in a written statement shortly after a recent briefing.
The new chapter alluded to is a space station on the moon. Now, here is the question - Do we need a space station at the moon, and are these big ticket missions worth the huge price we tax payers render? Weigh in, and tell us what you think.