A hilltop crucifixion of children, the biggest gold nugget ever yanked out of the ground, unexpected and deadly tornadoes in February, and a round of golf for space cases.
A hilltop crucifixion of children, the biggest gold nugget ever yanked out of the ground, unexpected and deadly tornadoes in February, and a round of golf for space cases.
From a vengeful saint’s ghost striking down a Viking conqueror to an occult-obsessed music producer who foresaw death at a séance and then walked straight into his own dark prophecy, February 3rd is one of history’s most unsettling dates.
The story of how early Mormon leaders allegedly believed six-foot-tall Quakers were living on the moon is stranger, funnier, and more complicated than the memes suggest — and it involves a newspaper hoax, bat-men, a German professor who saw cities on the lunar surface, and a game of telephone spanning four decades.
The story of how early Mormon leaders allegedly believed six-foot-tall Quakers were living on the moon is stranger, funnier, and more complicated than the memes suggest — and it involves a newspaper hoax, bat-men, a German professor who saw cities on the lunar surface, and a game of telephone spanning four decades.
Scientists are searching our own solar system for evidence that self-replicating alien machines visited Earth millions of years ago.
A respected geologist and author claimed on the podcast “The Joe Rogan Experience” that an ancient human civilization lived on the Moon and Mars 50,000 years ago, destroyed themselves through war, and that upcoming lunar missions will expose evidence the U.S. government has kept hidden for decades.
Astronomers spend billions searching deep space for alien signals while a growing number of scientists believe extraterrestrials might already be watching us from much closer than anyone imagined.
In 1835, a New York newspaper convinced thousands of readers that the moon teemed with bat-winged humanoids, walking beavers, and unicorns, creating the most successful media hoax in American history. For six extraordinary days, the impossible became accepted fact, revealing disturbing truths about what people desperately wanted to believe.
Six days in August turned a penny newspaper into the most-read publication in the world, convincing thousands that the moon teemed with unicorns, bipedal beavers, and winged humanoids who built temples to unknown gods.
Scientists discovered something massive buried beneath the lunar surface in 2019 — a metallic mass so large it could stretch from New York to Chicago, hidden hundreds of miles underground where no one expected anything to exist.
The flames rose blue and orange against the desert sky, their roar drowning out everything else on that Friday afternoon in 1964.
When Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll casually mentioned talking to “an astronaut yesterday who’s on the moon who’s a soldier” during a live Fox News interview, he sparked a firestorm of speculation about whether the government has been secretly operating on the lunar surface all along.
Louisiana’s House just passed a bill to ban “chemtrails,” potentially making it the first state to accidentally outlaw commercial aviation while opening the floodgates for conspiracy theorists to demand even more bizarre legislation.
The messages came from beyond the veil of space — and each George obeyed. What connected them? Why were they chosen? And what did the visitors really want?
NASA’s upcoming Blue Ghost mission aims to unravel a 200-year-old lunar mystery by exploring the enigmatic Gruithuisen Domes—strange formations on the Moon that defy scientific explanation.
💀 Numerous theories have been brought forward to explain how our moon came into being – and how it somehow is in the perfect position to allow life on Earth. But each theory, when examined closely, reveals fatal flaws. Maybe we should be thanking time travelers?