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Tall, scaly humanoids. Reptilian humanoid beings date back at least as far as Ancient Egypt, with the crocodile-headed river god Sobek. The reptilian conspiracy theory has been advocated by David Icke. Rods [20] or skyfish: Elongated visual artifacts appearing in photos and video recordings, sometimes claimed to be extraterrestrial beings.
"Not really into competitive online games but more relaxed story based co-op games like Baldur's Gate or It Takes Two are so fun to play together," reveals the gamer girl. #7 Petrol Station After ...
A pretty standard image comes to mind when thinking of aliens: a little green or gray being with a big head and black bug eyes. In the early 20th century, aliens tended to look pretty different ...
The science fiction genre, although not so named during the time, developed during the late 19th century. The expansion of the genre of extraterrestrials in fiction influenced the popular perception over the real-life topic, making people eager to jump to conclusions about the discovery of aliens. Science marched at a slower pace, some ...
The interdimensional hypothesis is a proposal that unidentified flying object (UFO) sightings are the result of experiencing other "dimensions" that coexist separately alongside our own [1] in contrast with either the extraterrestrial hypothesis that suggests UFO sightings are caused by visitations from outside the Earth or the psychosocial hypothesis that argues UFO sightings are best ...
A team of astrobiologists from the University of Oxford used evolutionary theory to determine that extraterrestrials are probably a lot like us.
The article goes on linking Hoover's story to other alleged UFO sightings and UFO abduction accounts with similar statements and reports about aliens actually being "humans of the future who have found the technology to overcome the limitations of light speed and time travel paradoxes that keep present day humans from breaching the boundaries ...
The ultimate question is no longer 'Is there life beyond Earth?' but rather 'Will we ever find it?'