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Fringe Science

In January of 1999, I was working as a second shift stocker at a local grocery store. It was normal for me to get home around midnight, and that night was no different.
After parking in the driveway, I got out of my car and looked up into the southern sky. Orion was high above some nearby trees. I was noting to myself how bright the stars were in the clear, cold air when I noticed a small white light moving from Orion's belt towards Sirius. At the time, I thought that it was a satellite.
As I was watching, the light suddenly changed its direction of travel. It made a sharp turn towards Betelgeuse. Then it plunged towards Eridanus.
I was stunned. These were not banking turns. Nor did the light seem to come to a stop then accelerate in a new direction. No, the light just suddenly changed direction, without slowing.
It kept zigging and zagging between the horizon and the Ecliptic until I lost it in the Pleiades.
Any satellite that maneuvered like that would be accelerating wildly and burning massive amounts of fuel. Further, satellites are seen near sunset and dawn, when they can reflect sunlight from around the Earth's curvature. This was around midnight.
The other possibilities that came to mind were a plane or insects. It was a cold January night, so I discount insects. And there were no other marker lights to indicate an aircraft, so I discount an aircraft.
Any ideas?

I've witnessed premonitions come true, apparent telepathy when people think exactly the same, very improbable coincidences and instances of karmic retribution

My grandfather was a naval aviator and an avid sailor who made it a point to teach me celestial navigation. Further, as an avid sportsman I have spent thousands of hours staring up at the night sky. It's safe to say that I'm familiar with most normal things in the sky and several unusual things, but all I can say with certainty is that I don't know what it was.
A few years later I was hanging out with a friend in his backyard. He was an Air Force veteran who was interested in astronomy, so I was pointing out a few constellations. Suddenly he said, "Look a satellite."
When I looked, the satellite made a sharp 90° turn and disappeared. My friend was stunned. He kept saying, "Satellites don't do that."
Keep looking up...

Any tales which you want to relate?

In childhood used to find Ursa Major and Polaris, while now enjoy Orion and Sirius during winters, as well as our planets... No UFOs

We wanted to buy tickets to a movie theater for the night next day, but a lady suggested not to, saying "who knows what can happen till tomorrow's night". Next morning I had a car accident. Can be premonition, can be a coincidence..
There were a few more from her...

A pilot friend of mine once saw an odd libght that moved across the night sky far faster and made a sharper turn than any aircraft could manage, however there is the problem that at night you can't really tell distance so it is not entirely convincing. Exactly what it was is unknown, and I suspect there are many other sightings like that.

We wanted to buy tickets to a movie theater for the night next day, but a lady suggested not to, saying "who knows what can happen till tomorrow'..."
I've had dreams which later came true, leaving me with a creepy feeling. But they tend to be in familiar locations and about people I know, so I figure that my subconscious is reading trends. Then I'm focusing on the hits and forgetting all of the misses.

Eridanus is right next to and below Orion, so it's easy for me to find.
In winter, the first thing I look for in the southern sky is Orion's belt. Following the line of the belt eastward takes you straight to Sirius. Following it westward takes you through Taurus and on to the Pleiades. Once you learn that line you can master the related constellations by just learning one more each night.
I found that when memorizing the constellations, their stories make for excellent mnemonic devices. For instance, Orion the Hunter is with his dog, Canis Major, on the edge of the river, Eridanus. Hiding at his feet is the rabbit, Lepus.
But I may be weird.

Of course I prefer to look towards the northern shy for Orion.

Of course I prefer to look towards the northern shy for Orion."
Oh that pesky line. One night I would like to see the stars rotate around the Southern Cross.


https://youtu.be/uImds-XA48g
While I think that the existence of extant Tasmanian Tigers is about a coin flip, the Marsupial Lion's survival has much longer odds.

Maybe, but probably not for decades.
My concern is the epigenetic data. Without that, we could have a perfect genetic sequence but no way to control expression.
Typical scientists trying to play God without any thought about the consequences of their actions. These creatures became extinct for a reason and we have no right to reintroduce them. If we do so, it'll mess with the greater order of things and the eco systems.
Anyway, haven't either of you watched Jurassic Park?
Anyway, haven't either of you watched Jurassic Park?

The reason for the extinction of the dodo was us. They're extinct because we messed with their ecosystem.
Ahem, yes, well...umm...
Dangerous precedent to set though. Also worth noting that, by all accounts, man's introduction of other species into the dodo's environment hastened their demise. Same thing happened with red squirrels in England. Unnecessary tinkering with nature.
Dangerous precedent to set though. Also worth noting that, by all accounts, man's introduction of other species into the dodo's environment hastened their demise. Same thing happened with red squirrels in England. Unnecessary tinkering with nature.


I'm not sure there's any doubt Ian that we're in the midst of the sixth extinction. While we can debate the causes, what we can't debate is the sheer number of critically endangered species who are on the brink. As an example, there are so few Right Whales left, that scientists can actually give each one a name. Very sad indeed.
Then of course, consider that certain insects are also endangered. Insects! Who multiply faster than anything else are endangered. This planet is in big trouble :(

https://myfox8.com/offbeat/were-closi...

Witches look to restore reputation after centuries of persecution
https://www.nbcnews.com/now/video/wit...

Back from the dead? Elusive ivory-billed woodpecker not extinct, researchers say
https://www.theguardian.com/environme...
J, I'm unable to link to your post as I'm on my phone but re your 3rd to last one, it sent shivers down my spine reading about evil witches on Easter Sunday...but I'll have a look at it tomorrow :)

As for spooky occurrences, the night my grandmother died, I felt her comforting presence at the foot of my bed. I knew it was her. Of course, I can't prove it.

As for spooky occurrences, the night my..."
It is a bit of a relief to read the accounts of others who have seen weird lights in the sky. Without some corroboration, one can start to doubt one's own mind.
As for sensing the presence of a dead relative, the closest that I've experienced was a little disturbing and hopefully all in my head.
My grandfather had suffered significant cognitive decline before the end. None of us could stand the thought of puting him in a care facility, so his care became a family endeavor. We spent many nights up and down with him.
For months after his passing, I would wake up in the early hours having heard him yell, fall, or knock something over. I spent hours searching for what made the noises.
I was relieved when relatives commented on being woken up by noises. Then a friend who had nursed his wife through her terminal cancer put my nerves at ease when he said that he had experienced the same thing, and it had lessened over time.
The noises abated. Now I sleep through the night. I guess that it was in my head. My subconscious was replacing the expected noises with imaginary ones. Once I got used to quiet again; my subconscious let it go.

https://www.news4jax.com/features/202...

Israeli-American physicist: Meteor that hit Earth in 2014 could be alien tech
https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblo...



Compared to an extra-solar object, lunar rocks are downright mundane, but we have spent millions of dollars per ounce to acquire them.

Actually, lunar rocks are very interesting from the scientific point of view, For example, why does the moon make anorthosite? Why are the isotopes the same as Earth when all modelling shows that the Moon has to be mainly the impactor? In any case, the US did not spend billions of dollars to collect moon rocks - it spent them to put the USSR in its place.

1.) You do realize that your first few sentences are a major endorsement for going after that meteorite? We have been studying the moon for as long as we've been in existence, yet just a few Moon rocks have raised a ton of questions which we wouldn't have thought to ask otherwise. Just imagine what questions a rock from another solar system might raise.
2.) No, we landed men on the Moon to put the Ruskies in their place. Then we sent up a dune buggy just to rub it in. The excess cargo capacity needed to bring back the rocks was a ton of money spent for science.

OK, USSR and Ruskies are not quite the same. My argument is the project was not primarily for science, and the rocks were just added in because it seemed reasonable to do it that way. Had it been for science they would have sent geologists to collect them, and only the last mission had anyone who could claim to be competent in geology. I can understand the thinking. That project was very risky. Test pilots, etc, can handle the risks. A person there only as a geologist would have no idea what they were and would be a nuisance other than when everything was going right.




https://www.theguardian.com/world/202...


42?

A Contemporary Reappraisal of the Stoned Ape Hypothesis
https://www.academia.edu/22060350/The...

Russian Media Accuse Ukraine of Using 'Black Magic' as Invasion Falters
https://www.newsweek.com/russian-medi...
Books mentioned in this topic
Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJ (other topics)Project Hail Mary / Artemis/ The Martian (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Roger Stone (other topics)Virgil (other topics)
David Icke (other topics)
Latif Yahia (other topics)
Michio Kaku (other topics)
More...
Feel free to politely critique and debate the posts in this thread. All that I ask is that you eschew posting fictional accounts and links to tabloids. There are enough oddities to be found without making them up.
So, what's weird?