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Post by auntym on Aug 31, 2012 12:56:59 GMT -6
www.ufodigest.com/article/belief-vs-deception-amazing-alien-skullAugust 31, 2012 Belief VS Deception - An amazing alien skull[/color] By Ed Fleming Ed Fleming (UFOII) ufoii1.blogspot.com Hello everyone it has been awhile since my last article so I thought I would share my thoughts about UFO belief and UFO deception. I recently discovered a supposed Alien skull picture. An amazing alien skull This is one of the mysterious fossilized, extra-large-size humanoid skulls found in Africa in 2011. Although the external size and the brain cavity size of this skull are similar to those of the modern human, it is actually 8 million years old. This means this humanoid is much older than any oldest skulls of humans on this planet, including Lucy (Australopithecus or AL 288- ) 1, which is estimated to have lived 3.2 million years ago) or Ardi (the earliest known hominid date to 4.4 million years ago). Currently, this mysterious skull has been investigated at 25 major universities and research centers around the world, including Coney Island University in Brooklyn, New York. Also, one of the many strange facts about this humanoid remain is that the skull contains extremely large amounts of iridium (560 times more than Ardi), which is a very common substance found in meteors from the outer space. (14.25 x 8 x 6 inch) CONTINUE READING: www.ufodigest.com/article/belief-vs-deception-amazing-alien-skull
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sunbow
Full Member
Seeing, Dreaming, and Loving...
Posts: 859
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Post by sunbow on Sept 3, 2012 18:09:00 GMT -6
I agree with the author. This is a hoax.
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Post by skywalker on Sept 3, 2012 20:13:53 GMT -6
Yup, definitely a hoax. There is another skull that looks really freaky that I'm not sure about yet. I started writing an article about it a couple months ago but my stupid computer crashed and deleted it and I haven't had the patience to start working on it again. I'll get to it sooner or later.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Sept 4, 2012 14:06:03 GMT -6
Too many people with too little to do
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sansseed
Full Member
Failure is not an option
Posts: 417
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Post by sansseed on Sept 5, 2012 16:47:05 GMT -6
That's why I like this forum. 1) someone finds the articles that are interesting. 2) then instead of reading the article I read the comments. Based on them I know whether it's worth reading the whole thing or not. You all are enabling my tendency to be lazy.
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Post by skywalker on Sept 5, 2012 20:06:23 GMT -6
You mean there was an article somewhere? Was I supposed to read it before I jumped to my conclusion? I suppose I could try that...
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2012 22:56:12 GMT -6
I find it interesting that people even commented on this . I really, really need to get with it on my social skills. You have no idea how much I read these articles, make some comment in my mind, and then just move on ;D. This hoax actually irritated me. Because I have to trust what is being told to me on the internet. I can't examine the skull for myself, obviously. The claim that it has been looked over by the pros is cruel. I have a hard time understanding someone going to all the trouble to make one of these skulls and then try to tell people that it is real .
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Post by skywalker on Sept 6, 2012 23:13:08 GMT -6
The skull could have been made as a prop for some movie or something and somebody found a picture of it and posted it on the internet and the stories just took off from there. That's one of the drawbacks of the internet...you have no way of knowing if something is true or not because anybody can say anything they want to. They don't have to have evidence to back it up.
Pretty much the only way to tell fact from fiction is to do as much research as possible and use other sources besides just the internet. After a while the hoaxes become a little bit easier to spot.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Sept 7, 2012 6:21:32 GMT -6
Please reference me to "other sources". I have been thinking about this lately. . . I kept a set of world book encyclopedias for fun, but their info is pretty sparse. Local library? Recent Time magazines? My kids (and their teachers) have become dependant on the internet for homework assignments. The teacher asks them if they have internet, and their school books are on line also. I guess it beats carrying around a load of books . I always tell them to get the books anyway-what if our internet is down? The girls only have one same teacher; different hours. Thanks Sky ;D
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Post by skywalker on Sept 7, 2012 19:36:33 GMT -6
I use a lot of different sources to get info. Books, magazines, the MUFON journal, newspapers, and talking tp the people who have knowledge and experience about the subject. Also actually going to places personally and seeing them for myself really helps me get a better understanding of what might have happened there.
The internet can be a good source of info but everything must be viewed with suspicion, or at least common sense. Anybody can write anything on the internet. I'm kind of worried about what will happen someday when people quit using books and start relying entirely on the internet for all of their information. It would be so easy for the government to change history and make it whatever they wanted it to be...and nobody would have the slightest idea what really happened.
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