Scotland has recently been a hotbed of UFO activity, and a Japanese TV crew is now saying that they have taped UFOs hovering over a hotel in an area deeply connected to the Knight?s Templar, using an automatic camera. UFO activity in and around the area near Edinburgh has increased dramatically in recent years.

The Japanese crew came to Scotland after Japanese tourists observed UFOs over a golf course in the area, and persuaded a Japanese television network to investigate. The Japanse set up an automatic camera on the roof of Gullane’s Templar Lodge Hotel
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Global Warming Means Dangerous Mosquitoes.

One of the effects of global warming could be the spread of the disease-carrying Asian tiger mosquito, a new study warns. Two researchers at Illinois State University found that the Asian tiger breeds faster in higher temperatures, which means that they could spread farther north and survive year-round in climates where colder winter temperatures now kill them off.
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Whales are moving to new locations, and dying off, at a great rate. Some may be moving because they sense a change of temperature in the deep ocean, while others are dying off in their traditional waters due to toxins and noise pollution.

A large number of endangered sperm whales are making a home in the Gulf of Mexico, near the dangerously busy mouth of the Mississippi River, a few miles from the Louisiana coast. Sperm whales usually hunt far out in the ocean and it is unusual for them to remain so close to shore. Also, the presence of the approximately 500 of these creatures, some of them bigger than a Greyhound bus, presents a danger to the supertankers, barges, trawlers and warships in the area?and the ships could prove dangerous to the whales.
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An Italian geologist maintains that the fabled monster of Loch Ness is nothing more than hot volcanic air, and he has sent ripples around the shores of the deep lake in order to test his theory. Luigi Piccardi, a seismologist from Florence, says the legend of Nessie, which dates back nearly 1,500 years, could be the result of a major geological fault that runs beneath the lake?s dark waters.

The Great Glen Fault, which runs the entire length of Britain?s largest lake, in the heart of the Scottish Highlands, is one of the country?s few still active volcanic areas. Piccardi says that it is bound to have produced sinister rumblings and hot bubbles of gas over the centuries, giving birth to stories of monsters living in its depths.
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