Project Core was an anonymous online survey comparing and contrasting experiences of every type of high strangeness phenomenon conceivable. Assembled for the first time to talk about some of the results and where we go from here are team members Jeff Ritzmann, Tyler Kokjohn, Ellen Tarr, and host Jeremy Vaeni. One anomaly that has come up in other surveys, which has baffled researchers for years–the association between Rh- blood and abductees–takes a turn toward the even more bizarre in a discovery made during this very conversation!
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The media is bursting with scare stories over asteroid 1999-FN53. It’s a kilometer wide and it’s going to make a close pass on Thursday at .68 astronomical units (AU). Will it strike Earth? Highly unlikely, NASA says. Its high speed of 30,000 mph means that it should be easily propelled past us without slowing down. If it did, it would essentially destroy civilization, leading to the death of at least a third of mankind.

It will not impact Earth on its initial pass, but only in the extremely unlikely event that it was caught by our planet’s gravity and began to orbit us. If that happened, it would eventually strike the planet. It is approximately twice the size of Mt. Everest and a strike would have devastating results.
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In the Science Channel’s "Through the Wormhole" documentary, Dr. Stuart Hameroff, director for the Center for Consciousness Studies at the University of Arizona, theorizes that consciousness continues after death in a parallel universe, using quantum theory. Building upon theories posited by other scientists, Dr. Hameroff explains that consciousness is a non-localized phenomenon that may be as old as the physical universe, and while a person is alive, resides in the brain’s microtubular structure, providing a link between the brain and the soul.
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Interested parties claim to have identified the writing on the mysterious placard that is visible on the slide of the alleged mummy of an alien from the Roswell crash that was displayed at a conference in Mexico on May 6. It was claimed that the slide depicted the mummified body of a creature that had died in the crash of a flying disk near Roswell, New Mexico in July of 1947. The first line of the placard reads "Mummified Body of a Two Year Old Boy." Subsequent lines are somewhat less clear, but the analysts can read most of the words: "At the time of burial the body was clothed in a xxx-xxx cotton shirt. Burial wrappings consisted of these small cotton blankets. Loaned by the Mr. Xxxxxx, San Francisco, California."
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