UFO crash in the Middle East – According to one reporter, a UFO crashed in Saudi Arabia on January 7, near the capital city Riyadh, which was seen as far away as Kuwait. It was viewed by millions of people, many of whom took photos of it. Thousands of people called the police to report it. Many frightened people began praying when they saw the object in the sky, which was described as being blue-green in color and shooting out green sparks.
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New blog by a Dreamland listener – Unknowncountry and Dreamland fan Jim Boyle has created a blog on Blogspot.com called Navigating Dreamland that comments on Dreamland and keeps up with the activities of our great hosts! It’s a thoughtful blog, and just another example of how our wonderful community is growing?and will continue to grow in the future (IF we’re still here!) To enjoy Jim’s blog, comment and participate, click here. If you got our FREE weekly email newsletter, you would have already read this story! To sign up, click here (and we NEVER share you email address with anyone).

Art credit: freeimages.co.uk

NOTE: This news story, previously published on our old site, will have any links removed.read more

?and replace corn as cattle food! – In case of drought, we want to find a way to remove the salt from water so we can drink it. Since this will be an expensive process, it would be great if we could irrigate our fields with salt water?especially in places like Australia, which are surrounded by ocean water and have ALSO recently experienced extreme droughts. Researchers may have discovered a way to do this.
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Did a huge wave (known as a tsunami)strike New York’s Fire Island, washing over Wall Street, 2,000 years ago? Geologists are finding evidence that this is what happened. We’re all worried about Wall Street’s financial problems?let’s hope we don’t have to worry about it literally drowning as well! Maybe we DO?who knows what the future will bring?

In the December 29th edition of the New York Times, Kenneth Chang reports that the gigantic wave rose as high as 20 feet before it engulfed lower Manhattan, leaving over a foot of sediment on the New Jersey shore (which is how they know it happened).
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