Did E.T. Just Phone Us?

“No one knows for sure what caused this signal,” a NASA statement said. “There is a slight possibility that it just might originate from an extraterrestrial intelligence.”

Click here to listen to a recently discovered and unidentified SETI signal. According to NASA, there is no explanation for this science fiction-sounding radio emission picked up recently by a SETI. I guess we can safely say that this is “Wow! signal” number two (the “Wow! signal occurred in 1977). Let’s hope that the next time such an anomaly occurs it repeats long enough for the scientists to really get a sense of what it is or where it’s coming from! You have to admit, when NASA says there is even a slight chance that something may have its origin in extraterrestrial intelligence, it’s worth sitting up in your seat…

For more about the recent anomaly click here to visit Mysterious Universe. Click here for NASA.

 

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Spiritually Evolved Extraterrestrials

According to a reenactment of a possibly authentic (!?) interview with a telepathically communicating alien, the truth is that the body is a vessel and we are able to change vessels after death… Could it be that the extraterrestrials are not only technologically advanced, but are also spiritually advanced?

Click here for the video.

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Reincarnated Beer?

Are you imagining it? It’s the early 1800’s and you’re on a ship in the Baltic Sea, you’re on your way to Russia and you’re a little bit drunk – on some excellent brew.

And then the storm hits…

(Let’s hear a cheer for reincarnated beer!)

Shipwreck’s ‘oldest beer’ to be analysed, brewed again

By Jason Palmer Science and technology reporter, BBC News

Samples of the world’s oldest beer have been taken in a bid to determine its recipe – and brew it again.

In July 2010, a Baltic Sea shipwreck dated between 1800 to 1830 yielded many bottles of what is thought to be the world’s oldest champagne.

Five of the bottles later proved to be the oldest drinkable beer yet found.

The local government of the Aland island chain where the wreck was found has now commissioned a scientific study to unpick the beer’s original recipe.

Divers found the two-mast ship at a depth of about 50 metres in the Aland archipelago, which stretches between the coasts of Sweden and Finland in the Baltic Sea.

The ship was believed to be making a journey between Copenhagen in Denmark and St Petersburg, then the capital of Russia…

For the complete story click here to go to BBC News.

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