Today’s UFO mystery comes to you from Barbury Castle, UK, where two crop circle investigators earlier this summer got kicked out of a cornfield. But then they touched a mysterious craft near the circles. And got it on film!
Over at Earthfiles, Linda Moulton reports that investigators Paul Jones and Andrew Pyrka were checking out a bird-shaped crop circle in June. When an angry farmer kicked them out of his fields, they started to drive away. But then they saw this shiny, orb-like thing floating in a nearby field. Could it have been the author of the crop circle they’d just been investigating? Jones wanted to find out, so he started filming it.
It looks sort of like a mini-helicopter, but matched reports they’d heard from locals about “orbs” that seemed to hang around areas where circles had been laid down. When the shiny thing continued to float in the field, Jones sent Pyrka out to pursue it. But when Pyrka got to the orb he couldn’t see it anymore. Was it just a trick of the light. Staying in cell phone contact with Pyrka, Jones was able to guide him until he was standing precisely under the glowy thing Jones was filming.
Moulton writes:
Andrew Pyrka was very confused. He was looking all around him, but could not see anything in the sky in any direction! So, Paul began trying to guide Andrew by phone closer and closer to the silver craft above him. At one point, Paul yells in the phone, “Andrew, you’re so close, put your arm up and see if you can feel anything.”
Andrew Pyrka lifted his left arm straight up toward the sky. “Instantly, when I put my arm up, there was a huge jolt of electrical current that went down my raised arm. I don’t think I touched anything solid,” he told me, “but I definitely interacted with some kind of strong field the UFO must have been giving off. But why couldn’t I see it where I was, while Paul could not only see it, he videotaped it for another fifteen minutes?”
Why indeed? And why was Pyrka able to withstand a “huge jolt of electrical current”? It’s just another one of those UFO mysteries.
via “I Touched A Crop-Circle-Making UFO,” Says Investigator.
Archive for August 4th, 2009
“I Touched A Crop-Circle-Making UFO,” Says Investigator
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
Posted in Strange, UFOs | 3 Comments »
Laos’ Plain of Jars: It’s a mystery, plain and simple
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
Steve McKenna studies a bizarre and ancient site that also bears the scars of a more recent ‘secret’.
The Plain of Jars has all the ingredients to stir the imagination. Shrouded in mystery and myth, and laced with intrigue and tragedy, this is a bizarre collection of ancient cylinders scattered in their hundreds across the war-scarred countryside of northern Laos’s Xieng Khuang province.
They’re believed to have been created by travelling Indian tribes more than 2000 years ago and, as I look at them for the first time, I can’t help but think they’re an Asian version of Stonehenge – only smaller and with far fewer tourists.
Whereas Stonehenge’s ruins tower above visitors, I’m able to peer into most of the lichen-encrusted jars. I’m hoping to perhaps glimpse a few gilded treasures but I spot little more than spiderwebs, birds’ feathers and rainwater coated in algae. …
The jars’ origins and purposes still puzzle.
Local legend claims they were made of congealed water-buffalo skin so they could store rice and lao-lao (Laos’s rice whisky) for a giant who lived nearby.
French archaeologist Madeleine Colani, visiting in the 1930s, established that most were crafted from sandstone (after all, they weigh up to a tonne each) and were probably used for ancient funeral ceremonies.
Colani found a human-shaped bronzed figure carved into one urn and, nearby, a scattering of tiny stone beads, but the lack of organic materials inside the jars, notably bones, has compounded their enigma.
Posted in Archaeology | Leave a Comment »
Experts puzzled by spot on Venus
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
Astronomers are puzzled by a strange bright spot which has appeared in the clouds of Venus.
The spot was first identified by an amateur astronomer on 19 July and was later confirmed by the European Space Agency’s Venus Express spacecraft.
Data from the European probe suggests the spot appeared at least four days before it was spotted from Earth.
The bright spot has since started to expand, being spread by winds in Venus’s thick atmosphere.
Scientists are unsure as to what caused the bright spot tens of kilometres up. However, a volcanic eruption is a possibility.
Much of the planet is thought to have been resurfaced by volcanism. Though no firm evidence for present-day volcanism has been discovered, scientists suspect it could still be happening on Venus.
But an eruption would have needed to be extremely powerful to penetrate this far through the planet’s dense, mainly carbon dioxide, atmosphere.
Another potential source for the bright spot are charged particles from the Sun interacting with Venus’s atmosphere.
Alternatively, atmospheric turbulence may have caused bright material to become concentrated in one area.
This is not the first time bright areas have been spotted on Venus. But this feature is unusual because it is confined to a relatively small region.
via BBC NEWS | Science & Environment | Experts puzzled by spot on Venus.
Posted in Space | Leave a Comment »
Comets ‘not cause of extinctions’
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
Comet strikes are an unlikely cause of past mass extinctions on Earth, according to computer simulations.
Scientists used the simulations to model the paths of long-period comets, to determine the likelihood of these “dirty snowballs” striking our planet.
The University of Washington, Seattle, research appears in Science journal.
How many mass extinctions in Earth’s history were caused by these icy bodies crashing into our planet has been a subject of considerable debate.
Many scientists agree that an asteroid strike 65 million years ago wiped out the dinosaurs. But there is uncertainty about how many other such events were triggered by asteroid or comet colliding with Earth.
Comets are composed of dust, rock, water ice and frozen gases. When their orbits bring them into close proximity with the Sun, parts of them warm up, causing material to sublimate (turn directly from a solid to a gas state) and form a “fuzzy” envelope around the comet nucleus.
Asteroids are distinguished from comets precisely because they lack this envelope, or “coma”.
via BBC NEWS | Science & Environment | Comets ‘not cause of extinctions’.
Posted in Archaeology, Earth, Space | Leave a Comment »
Judge clears way for creationist dinosaur park to be seized
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
A federal judge has cleared the way for the government’s seizure of a creationism theme park in Pensacola owned by a couple convicted of tax fraud.
A ruling by U.S. District Judge Casey Rodgers states that the nine properties that make up Dinosaur Adventure Land as well as two bank accounts associated with the park will be used to satisfy $430,400 owed to the federal government.
Kent Hovind, who founded the park and a ministry, Creation Science Evangelism, is serving 10 years in federal prison for failing to pay the Internal Revenue Service more than $470,000 in employee taxes.
He was found guilty in November 2006 on 58 counts, including failure to pay employee taxes and making threats against investigators.
The conviction culminated 17 years of Hovind sparring with the IRS. Saying he was employed by God and his ministers were not subject to payroll taxes, he claimed no income or property.Hovind is incarcerated at the Edgefield Federal Correction Institution in South Carolina.
via Judge clears way for dinosaur park to be seized | pnj.com | Pensacola News Journal.
Survival of the fittest prevails.
Posted in Biology | Leave a Comment »
‘UFO’ photographed ‘tracking’ RAF Hercules
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
John Powell, 56, claims an unusual silver orb was following the military craft as it came in to land at the base.
The retired school teacher was gardening at his home in nearby Westbury when he noticed the sun glinting off the circular surface.
“I don’t believe in things from outer space but that thing was definitely tracking the plane,” he said.
“My neighbour was in the garden at the time and I wanted to shout to them, but I didn’t want to say ‘there’s a flying saucer in the sky’ so I didn’t say anything in the end.”
Mr Powell, who taught computer sciences in Belfast for 30 years, added: “I thought at the time this is too good to miss but I didn’t think the picture would come out as good as this.
Posted in UFOs | Leave a Comment »
Hidden Gobi Desert relics found
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
Rare Buddhist treasures, not seen for more than 70 years, have been unearthed in the Gobi Desert.
The historic artefacts were buried in the 1930s during Mongolia’s Communist purge, when hundreds of monasteries were looted and destroyed.
The relics include statues, art work, manuscripts and personal belongings of a famous 19th Century Buddhist master.
The leader of the search team, Michael Eisenriegler, described it as an “adventure of a lifetime”.
A total of 64 crates of treasures were buried in the desert by a monk named Tudev, in an attempt to save them from the ransacking of the Mongolian and Soviet armies.
They belonged to Buddhist master Danzan Ravjaa and only Tudev knew where they were hidden. He passed on the secret to his grandson who dug up some of the boxes in the 1990s and opened a museum.
… The latest finds will be put on show at the Danzan Ravjaa Museum in Sainshand, 400km (250 miles) south of the Mongolian capital, Ulan Bator.
About 20 boxes remain hidden in the desert.
via BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | Hidden Gobi Desert relics found.
Posted in Archaeology, Religion | Leave a Comment »
Study: High cholesterol in midlife raises risk of late-life dementia
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
Elevated cholesterol levels in midlife – even levels considered only borderline elevated – significantly increase the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia later in life, according to a new study by researchers at Kaiser Permanente’s Division of Research and the University of Kuopio in Finland. The study appears in the journal Dementia & Geriatric Cognitive Disorders.
The four-decade study of 9,844 men and women found that having high cholesterol in midlife (240 or higher milligrams per deciliter of blood) increases, by 66 percent, the risk for Alzheimer’s disease later in life. Even borderline cholesterol levels (200 – 239 mg/dL) in midlife raised risk for late-life vascular dementia by nearly the same amount: 52 percent. Vascular dementia, the second most common form of dementia after Alzheimer’s disease, is a group of dementia syndromes caused by conditions affecting the blood supply to the brain. Scientists are still trying to pinpoint the genetic factors and lifestyle causes for Alzheimer’s disease.
By measuring cholesterol levels in 1964 to 1973 based on the 2002 Adult Treatment Panel III guidelines (the current practice standard) when the Kaiser Permanente Northern California members were 40 to 45 years old, then following the participants for 40 years, this study is the largest long-term study with the most diverse population to examine the midlife cholesterol levels and late-life dementia. It is also the first study to look at borderline high cholesterol levels and vascular dementia, rather than just Alzheimer’s disease.
“Our study shows that even moderately high cholesterol levels in your 40s puts people at greater risk for Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia decades later,” said the study’s senior author. Rachel Whitmer, Ph.D., a research scientist and epidemiologist at the Kaiser Permanente Division of Research in Oakland, Calif. “Considering that nearly 100 million Americans have either high or borderline cholesterol levels, this is a disturbing finding. The good news here is that what is good for the heart is also good for the mind, and this is an early risk factor for dementia that can be modified and managed by lowering cholesterol through healthy lifestyle changes.”
via High cholesterol in midlife raises risk of late-life dementia, Kaiser Permanente study finds.
Posted in Food, Health | 3 Comments »
Research shows temptation more powerful than individuals realize
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
Whether it’s highlighted in major news headlines about Argentinean affairs and Ponzi schemes, or in personal battles with obesity and drug addiction, individuals regularly succumb to greed, lust and self-destructive behaviors. New research from the Kellogg School of Management examines why this is the case, and demonstrates that individuals believe they have more restraint than they actually possess–ultimately leading to poor decision-making.
The study, led by Loran Nordgren, senior lecturer of management and organizations at the Kellogg School, examined how an individual’s belief in his/her ability to control impulses such as greed, drug craving and sexual arousal influenced responses to temptation. The research found the sample, on average, displayed a “restraint bias,” causing individuals to miscalculate the amount of temptation they could truly handle, in turn leading to a greater likelihood of indulging impulsive or addictive behavior.
“People are not good at anticipating the power of their urges, and those who are the most confident about their self-control are the most likely to give into temptation,” said Nordgren. “The key is simply to avoid any situations where vices and other weaknesses thrive and, most importantly, for individuals to keep a humble view of their willpower.”
In developing their case, the study’s authors cited previous research demonstrating that people often have difficulty appreciating the power of impulsive states. People in a “cold state” (not experiencing hunger, anger, sexual arousal, etc.) tend to underestimate how a “hot,” impulsive state will influence their behavior.
via Research shows temptation more powerful than individuals realize.
Posted in Mind | Leave a Comment »
New microchip technology performs 1,000 chemical reactions at once
Posted by Xeno on August 4, 2009
Flasks, beakers and hot plates may soon be a thing of the past in chemistry labs. Instead of handling a few experiments on a bench top, scientists may simply pop a microchip into a computer and instantly run thousands of chemical reactions, with results — literally shrinking the lab down to the size of a thumbnail.
Toward that end, UCLA researchers have developed technology to perform more than a thousand chemical reactions at once on a stamp-size, PC-controlled microchip, which could accelerate the identification of potential drug candidates for treating diseases like cancer.
Their study appears in the Aug. 21 edition of the journal Lab on a Chip and is currently available online.
A team of UCLA chemists, biologists and engineers collaborated on the technology, which is based on microfluidics — the utilization of miniaturized devices to automatically handle and channel tiny amounts of liquids and chemicals invisible to the eye. The chemical reactions were performed using in situ click chemistry, a technique often used to identify potential drug molecules that bind tightly to protein enzymes to either activate or inhibit an effect in a cell, and were analyzed using mass spectrometry.
via New microchip technology performs 1,000 chemical reactions at once.
Posted in Biology, Technology | Leave a Comment »
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Today’s UFO mystery comes to you from Barbury Castle, UK, where two crop circle investigators earlier this summer got kicked out of a cornfield. But then they touched a mysterious craft near the circles. And got it on film!
Steve McKenna studies a bizarre and ancient site that also bears the scars of a more recent ‘secret’.
Astronomers are puzzled by a strange bright spot which has appeared in the clouds of Venus.
Comet strikes are an unlikely cause of past mass extinctions on Earth, according to computer simulations.
John Powell, 56, claims an unusual silver orb was following the military craft as it came in to land at the base.
The leader of the search team, Michael Eisenriegler, described it as an “adventure of a lifetime”.
Elevated cholesterol levels in midlife – even levels considered only borderline elevated – significantly increase the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia later in life, according to a new study by researchers at Kaiser Permanente’s Division of Research and the University of Kuopio in Finland. The study appears in the journal Dementia & Geriatric Cognitive Disorders.
Whether it’s highlighted in major news headlines about Argentinean affairs and Ponzi schemes, or in personal battles with obesity and drug addiction, individuals regularly succumb to greed, lust and self-destructive behaviors. New research from the Kellogg School of Management examines why this is the case, and demonstrates that individuals believe they have more restraint than they actually possess–ultimately leading to poor decision-making.