Private Company to Launch Bold New Search for Malaysian Flight 370

Private Company to Launch Bold New Search for MH370

An American-based company has reached a rather unique agreement with the Malaysian government to revive the search for infamous lost airliner MH370 using a remarkably sophisticated approach.

The ambitious expedition, put together by a group known as Ocean Unlimited, is expected to be announced next week and could begin in just a few days.

What makes this new search particularly promising is the incredible technology to be used by the group.

Oceans Unlimited plans to deploy a whopping eight unmanned submarines to scour a patch of the Indian Ocean believed to be where MH370 may rest.

Each of the UAV subs will communicate with an unmanned companion boat floating above them which will relay data back to a massive main vessel, allowing the search to fan out to an enormous area.

Even more reason to optimistic is that the batteries for the subs allow them to operate for two-and-a-half days at a time.

Incredibly, the previous multinational search that was ended last year only deployed one UAV submarine and it was far less advanced than the devices to be used by Oceans Unlimited.

And, adding another intriguing layer to this development, the agreement between the Malaysian government and Oceans Unlimited makes the search something of a gamble for the group.

That’s because the deal struck between the two parties says that Oceans Unlimited will not get any money from the Malaysian government for their work unless they find MH370.

Although the exact parameters of the ‘no find, no fee’ agreement have yet to be announced, it is believed that the group will receive somewhere between $20 and $70 million dollars should they be successful within 90 days.

And so in the next three months, we’ll either see the story of MH370 solved once and for all or some brave individuals will have lost a considerable sum of money to create the next chapter in the mystery.

Not to be left out of the equation.

370

This is fake.

The Seventies

Now that you’re gone
All that’s left is a band of gold
All that’s left of the dreams I hold
Is a band of gold
And the memories of what love could be
If you were still here with me

You took me from the shelter of my mother
I had never known or loved any other
We kissed after taking vows
But that night on our honeymoon
We stayed in separate rooms

I wait in the darkness of my lonely room
Filled with sadness, filled with gloom
Hoping soon
That you’ll walk back through that door
And love me like you tried before

Since you’ve been gone
All that’s left is a band of gold
All that’s left of the dreams I hold
Is a band of gold
And the dream of what love could be
If you were still here with me

Ohh

Don’t you know that I wait
In the darkness of my lonely room
Filled with sadness, filled with gloom
Hoping soon
That you’ll walk back through that door
And love me like you tried before

Historical Photos of UFOs

The photos are original and no doctoring has taken place according to the New York Daily News.

 

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Four brightly glowing, unidentified objects appeared in the sky at 9:35 a.m. on July 15, 1952 over a parking lot in Salem, Massachusetts.
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Santa Ana, Califonia
Orange County highway department investigator Rex Heflin, who said he did not believe in flying saucers, photographed a saucer-shaped flying object that has still to be identified. The picture was taken while Heflin was working near the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air facility near here with a polaroid camera about the same time numerous reports of UFO sightings were made throughout the western states. Heflin estimated the object was 30 feet in diameter and 8 feet thick and was visible for 15 seconds.
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This photograph, reproduced from the quarterly UFO periodical Flying Saucers International in Los Angeles, shows silvery white flying objects as seen by photographer Erich Kaiser while descending from Reichenstein mountain in Austria on Aug. 3, 1954.
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Four Sicilians gaze skyward at two unidentified objects similar to those mentioned in press reports and in photos from other European countries at the time. The authenticity of the images was checked by questioning the photographer, who said the objects were in the sky and remained still for several minutes on Dec. 10, 1954.
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Michael Savage, 15-year-old son of prominent San Bernardino physician and surgeon, was practicing picture-taking with his new camera, when he saw motion out of the corner of his eye on July 24, 1956. He quickly shot this picture, tried to shoot another and in his haste, over-cranked the camera, drawing a blank with his second shot. The object disappeared in 30 seconds, he said, not over the horizon but quickly out of sight in the sky.
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A UFO sighting by a New Mexico State University student, West of Picacho Peak, Las Cruces, New Mexico on March 12, 1967. About 2:00pm the student was hiking in a desert area near Picacho Peak, New Mexico, when he spotted a big round silvery object hovering in the air just above a rocky hill about 500 yards away. He prepared his camera and snapped one good black and white picture of the object.
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Robert Rinker, a field technician at the mountain laboratory weather station on Chalk Mountain near Climax, Colorado, discovered this unidentified object on his negative after he shot a roll of film in the area and processed it a year later in 1967.
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Los Angeles, California
The Amalgamated Flying Saucer Club of America, which headquarters in Los Angeles, released this photo taken by a member reportedly showing a flying saucer estimated at seventy feet in diameter.

Alaskan infant’s DNA tells story of ‘first Americans’

BBC

Excavations at the Upward Sun River archaeological site in AlaskaImage copyrightBEN POTTER
Image captionExcavations at the Upward Sun River archaeological site in Alaska

The 11,500-year-old remains of an infant girl from Alaska have shed new light on the peopling of the Americas.

Genetic analysis of the child, allied to other data, indicates she belonged to a previously unknown, ancient group.

Scientists say what they have learnt from her DNA strongly supports the idea that a single wave of migrants moved into the continent from Siberia just over 20,000 years ago.

Lower sea-levels back then would have created dry land in the Bering Strait.

It would have submerged again only as northern ice sheets melted and retreated.

The pioneering settlers became the ancestors of all today’s Native Americans, say Prof Eske Willerslev and colleagues. His team has published its genetics assessment in the journal Nature.

IllustrationImage copyrightERIC.S.CARLSON ILLUSTRATION
Image captionAn illustration of how the Ancient Beringians at Upward Sun River might have lived

The skeleton of the six-week-old infant was unearthed at the Upward Sun River archaeological site in 2013.

The local indigenous community have named her “Xach’itee’aanenh t’eede gay”, or “sunrise girl-child”.

The science team refers to her simply as USR1.

“These are the oldest human remains ever found in Alaska, but what is particularly interesting here is that this individual belonged to a population of humans that we have never seen before,” explained Prof Willerslev, who is affiliated to the universities of Copenhagen and Cambridge.

“It’s a population that is most closely related to modern Native Americans but is still distantly related to them. So, you can say she comes from the earliest, or most original, Native American group – the first Native American group that diversified.

“And that means she can tell us about the ancestors of all Native Americans,” he told BBC News.

Scientists study the history of ancient populations by analysing the mutations, or small errors, that accumulate in DNA down through the generations.

These patterns, when combined with demographic modelling, make it possible to draw connections between different groups of people over time.

BeringiaImage copyrightSPL
Image captionDuring the height of the last ice age, lower sea-levels would have opened a land bridge

The new study points to the existence of an ancestral population that started to become distinct genetically from East Asians around 34,000 years ago, and which had completed the separation by roughly 25,000 years ago – indicative of the Bering land bridge connecting Siberia and Alaska having been crossed, or at the very least of the ancestral population having become geographically isolated in north-east Siberia.

The analysis further suggests that a group of Ancient Beringians, represented by USR1, then subsequently began to diverge from the pioneer migrants. This genetic separation occurs at about 20,000 years ago and is the result of these people staying put in Alaska for several thousand years.

Others in the pioneer wave, however, moved south to occupy territories beyond the ice.

This onward-moving branch ultimately became the two genetic groups that are recognised as the ancestors of today’s indigenous populations.

Prof Willerslev said: “Before this girl’s genome, we only had more recent Native Americans and ancient Siberians to try to work out the relationships and times of divergence. But now we have an individual from a population between the two; and that really opens the door to address these fundamental questions.”

More definitive answers would only come with the discovery of further remains in north-east Siberia and Alaska, the scientist added.

That is complicated in the case of the north-west American state because its acidic soils are unfavourable to the preservation of skeletons and in particular their DNA material.