Derinkuyu, Turkey. A hidden ancient city beneath the earth, but WHY? It housed as many as 20,000 to 60,000 people https://knowledge-time.com/derinkuyu-underground-city-18354/
Derinkuyu, Turkey. A hidden ancient city beneath the earth, but WHY? It housed as many as 20,000 to 60,000 people https://knowledge-time.com/derinkuyu-underground-city-18354/
A California motorist captured footage of a puzzling anomaly that appeared to cross in front of her car and some suspect that the eerie oddity may have been a ghost. The peculiar video was reportedly sent to a local TV station by an unnamed Fresno resident who explained that the strange sighting occurred on Monday evening as she was returning home from a nearby casino. During the drive, the motorist said, she encountered a series of fog patches that led her to film the trip with her cell phone and, when she later checked the footage, the woman was astounded by what she saw.
A spooky piece of footage circulating online shows what appears to be several ghosts being detected by a Tesla that is parked inside a graveyard. The eerie video was reportedly filmed at a cemetery in the Rhode Island community of Burrillville, where the infamous Conjuring house in located. In the video, a group of friends stop their Tesla on a road within the graveyard and the vehicle suddenly senses what it perceives to be a person, which it shows on the car's display screen. A second figure subsequently pops up on the GPS system and the two 'people' seemingly wander around near the car for several seconds. The group's fascination with what is happening quickly turns to terror when the suspected ghosts suddenly multiply.
An exhaustive expedition aimed at locating Amelia Earhart's lost plane may have spotted the elusive aircraft sitting on the floor of the Pacific Ocean. The remarkable mission was reportedly spearheaded by former U.S. Air Force intelligence officer Tony Romeo, who spent a staggering $11 million on the endeavor. This past Autumn, he and his team zeroed in on an area of the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Howell Island, where it is believed that the legendary aviator's flight came to a tragic end back in 1937. In looking for the lost plane, they deployed a submersible that scanned massive swaths of the ocean floor over the course of several weeks and, when the team later examined the data, they were stunned by what they saw.
Visitors to Orange County beaches this week reported spotting the glowing blue waves in multiple locations during nighttime hours, and charter boat services have been offering special after dark tours of the illuminated waters.
The phenomenon is caused by an algae known as lingulodinium polydra, which is known for its bioluminescence, or natural glowing, when it reacts to being moved by the water.
The glowing waves correspond with the red tide, an algae bloom that can cause the waters to appear red, brown or orange during the day due to the presence of the algae.
"It's the same type of organism when you have a red tide, which gives the water kind of an orangish brown, red kind of tint when they are in high density during the day," Nate Jaros, senior director of fish and invertebrates at the Aquarium of the Pacific told KTLA-TV. "But at night when disturbed, they produce bioluminescence. So, when there's a lot of agitation in the surf, it can activate that bioluminescence which makes the waves appear to be glowing."
The mystery surrounding a curious note found in a Pennsylvania man's cereal has expanded exponentially over the past few weeks as dozens of people say that they have also discovered unsettling missives inside the packaging of various products. The truly odd phenomenon first came to light back in late December when Sugarloaf Township resident Joe Miller opened a sealed box of Lucky Charms and spotted a small piece of paper amid the cereal. The unexpected note was said to contain "a mash-up of words and references to current events and conspiracy theories." When word of the weird incident reached the public, the proverbial floodgates opened and a subsequent series of investigations determined that there is a much bigger mystery unfolding in the area.
According to the Pennsylvania TV station that first shared Miller's story, in the days that followed their report, they received a staggering "100 emails, phone calls, and private messages from viewers recalling finding a variety of similar notes in a myriad of different food and cosmetics products at almost a half dozen Pennsylvania retailers." As if the situation were not strange enough, they learned of instances wherein cryptic messages, seemingly from the same source, were discovered in a state park. "Who would take the time to take a little wire and wrap it around a tree, and put this note on a paper clip," wondered the woman who stumbled upon the missive, "it’s just scary."
Although the specific contents of the initial Lucky Charms missive that kicked off the mystery had been kept secret by the station, they as well as one local police department have since released some of the messages to illustrate their strangeness to the public. As originally described, the notes feature an indecipherable array of words and names that, one local computer expert suggested, appear to comprise some kind of code. "There's a cipher within there," Spencer Rappaport mused, "it's a piece of the puzzle." However, the haphazard distribution of the notes leaves one wondering if it is even possible to complete the message that is trying to be sent.
Setting aside the mystery surrounding what the notes mean, authorities are understandably far more concerned with how someone is slipping the pieces of paper into the packaging of various products. "What breach has occurred between the manufacturing place and the point of sale," one local police chief wondered about the puzzling phenomenon, "that they were able to get into a manufacturer's box without being detected still being sealed." With concern over the notes now bordering on hysteria, area authorities as well as the FBI are eager to get to the bottom of the mystery to bring calm to the public and put an end to the unnerving phenomenon.
https://www.pahomepage.com/news/i-team/mystery-notes/notes-revealed-cryptic-investigation-continues/
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A woman in Oregon captured footage of a large bipedal figure scrambling up the side of a hill and she believes that the curious creature could be Bigfoot. The intriguing video was shared with the Rocky Mountain Sasquatch Organization by the witness, Kelley, who explained that the incident occurred when she and her daughter were visiting a remote campground in the state's Blue Mountains. As the pair were entering the site, she spotted what initially appeared to be a person on a distant hillside. Upon parking their car, she attempted to point out the individual to her daughter, but the youngster was unable to see the figure, which led Kelley to film the stranger with her cell phone zooming in on what was revealed to be a rather puzzling figure.