In this week’s poll, we ask you if you think the face on Mars was created eons ago by Martians or by a lost, space-traveling human civilization. Was it created by aliens from outside our solar system?or do you think it?s a natural formation? Check out our news story on the Mars face. And whatever you think, be sure to vote.

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

Whitley Strieber writes, “We are going to experience both sudden climate change and magnetic pole shift over the same few years?and that by the end of another ten years or so, we will be living in a world with radically different weather and a magnetic field that is no longer organized, but in a state of flux?So then I must ask about why it would be that certain ancient calendars predict massive change at just this time, if the people who created them were really as primitive as conventional science believes?” Read what Whitley has to say about our future.

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

For years, NASA has claimed that images of strange objects picked up by Space Shuttle cameras and satellites are nothing but camera errors or misidentified images.

But now hundreds of UFOs have been captured by the European SOHO satellite, which was sent out to observe the sun. Euroseti founder Mike Murray says, “They are the archetypal flying saucers?disc-shaped objects with some kind of glow around them. Many have a pulsing light and leave a trail behind them?The first thing we did when we got the images was to speak to NASA, who said it was a camera fault. But by enhancing the images we proved this wasn’t the case.”

NASA also said the objects could be asteroids or comets, but this doesn?t explain the way they move independently and make sharp turns.read more

If there’s one thing we take for granted, it’s bananas. They’re always cheap and available on the grocery store shelves. But it turns out they may vanish in a decade if we don’t develop new blight-resistant varieties. Could we be facing the end of our yellow friend?

Today’s Cavendish banana has an ancestor called the Gros Michel that was wiped out by a soil fungus in the 1950s. Emile Frison, of the International Network for the Improvement of Banana and Plantain (INIBAP), says it will take genetic engineering to save the current variety, because it lacks the genetic diversity needed to survive.
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