Contrary to popular belief, the first UFO was not seen bypilot Kenneth Arnold in 1947. The first UFO sightingrecorded in modern times took place on November, 17, 1882when the British Royal Observatory at Greenwich described “astrange celestial visitor–a circular object glowing green.”

The observatory offered no theory regarding the object,beyond recording it in the sighting log for the day.

Ironically, the skeptics claim that professional astronomersnever see UFOs, forgetting the the first UFO seen in moderntimes was recorded by some of the most skilled professionalastronomers of their day.
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The US Air Force is exploring a radically new method offlight: teleportation. Eric Davis of Warp Drive Metricsdescribes his Teleportation Physics Study in this way:

“This study was tasked with the purpose of collectinginformation describing the teleportation of materialobjects, providing a description of teleportation as itoccurs in physics, its theoretical and experimental status,and a projection of potential applications. The study alsoconsisted of a search for teleportation phenomena occurringnaturally or under laboratory conditions that can beassembled into a model describing the conditions required toaccomplish the transfer of objects.”
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For years, paleontologists have believed that ice blockedoverland migration from Asia to the Americas until 13,000years ago. As a result, the profession has routinely ignoredevidence of a human presence in the Americas prior to thisdate, no matter how compelling.

Now brown bear fossils in Canada reveal that migration waspossible at least 25,000 years ago, long before the Berengialand bridge was supposedly open. The fossil fragments werefound in Alberta, Canada, and dated to a much earlier erathan has previously been thought possible. Previously,35,000 year old brown bear fossils have been found inBerengia itself (now submerged between Alaska and Siberia),but nothing older than 13,000 years had been found south ofthe land bridge itself.
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A tragedy of modern medicine has been doctors’ inability todiagnose Alzheimer’s disease. Now a stunning newnanotechnology process might make early diagnosis possible.Along with new treatments in testing, this could lelp savemillions from the living death of this disease.

A process called the Bio-Barcode-Assay can recognise ADDL,the protein that slowly destroys the brains of Alzheimersvictims. The test manipulates molecules at the nanometerscale, and is a million times more sensitive than current tests.

In the future, it might also enable extremely early testingfor various types of cancer, as well as such currentlyundiagnosable diseases as Cruetzfeld-Barr syndrome, and veryearly detection of HIV.
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