NASA Never A Straight Answer


The nine most mysterious objects in the Universe

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NASA will never give us a right answer. A dragon has obviously been photographed here by a space telescope. You see so much blood and body parts flying through space that it’s just scary.

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They will all go to HELL

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Ever since I studied the Apocryphal texts, I’ve always said it. The certainty is so reassuring… Anyone who doesn’t start looking is lost and it won’t be too long before the false teachers are exposed.

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Could a dragon evolve an organ that produces its own spark like a kaiju from Pacific Rim? Science has many sources of ignition to choose from, it’s just a matter of what science allows. Dragons are basically our pipe dreams of what birds would be if they still looked like ancient dinosaurs but followed evolution’s flight plan. Dragons’ similarities with birds (themselves in fact dinosaurs) could provide the last critical link to flame flinging. With multiple stomachs aiding digestion, birds—and by extension, dragons—could evolve a specialized sack for storing either methane or combustible chemicals. Birds also eat stones and rocks to break up tough material in these stomachs, so Smaug munching on minerals isn’t that far-fetched either.

If dragon teeth had piezoelectric properties—where mechanical stress produces small jolts of electricity—a combination of methane exhalation and teeth grinding could light the fire. Or maybe the crushed stones and minerals could vaporize in the air ahead of the methane and combust, as metals do on helicopter rotors in the Kopp-Etchells Effect. Perhaps the dragons could expel the liquids or gases so quickly from their bellies that static ignition would occur.


Like a Boy Scout’s trusty flint, clicking dragon teeth would provide the ignition for either a glut of methane gas or a gush of hypergolic liquids

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The blue dragon stone in Morocco could withstand acid, so it definitely coated the dragon in the deserts throat. It makes sense what you said. I wonder if our natural gass comes from them.

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брат у драконов зубы мудрости были платиновыми они высекали искру зубами а в легких у них был гелий

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What James Webb Found, But Experts Are Trying To Hide About Proxima B! https://youtu.be/Ej1ug0n1z8k

DARK ENERGY DARK MATTER

“This Is Going To Hurt!” New James Webb Telescope Discovery shakes up Einstein’s Cosmological Theory

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Ermangand17
It’s possible Dragons had platinum teeth that provided sparks to ignite a gas. I think if it’s a gas it would be methane, and the spark or ignition comes from carbon on their teeth used like a flint when they clacked their ground their teeth together. Anything’s possible without knowing and trying to come up with how it might have been done.

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They don’t even need wings, they don’t really need helium in their lungs, which makes their body light, but if they get into a fire, they can explode loudly from the inside.

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Very cool. It was very clear but something was definitely in the clouds.

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The article discusses the theory of Egyptian contact with extraterrestrial beings, focusing on evidence like the pyramids’ construction and hieroglyphics. Proponents argue that these suggest advanced alien technology, but traditional archaeologists attribute them to Egyptian craftsmanship. Other cited evidence includes artifacts like the “Dendera light bulb,” often explained by misinterpretation. The article emphasizes the need for skepticism and scientific rigour, concluding that claims of extraterrestrial contact remain speculative.

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In 1902, the quiet town of West Linn, Oregon, was thrust into the spotlight with the remarkable discovery of a 16-ton meteorite—still the largest ever found in the United States. The colossal iron rock was unearthed by a local property owner who, awed by its size and potential worth, attempted to drag it nearly half a mile, presumably in an effort to claim it. The sheer audacity of the act reflected not just the meteorite’s physical weight, but the fascination such a celestial rarity evoked in an age when space remained a vast and little-understood frontier.

As scientists became aware of the find, the West Linn meteorite quickly gained prominence in the field of meteoritics. Believed to have originated from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, it offered researchers an extraordinary glimpse into the early days of the solar system. Its immense size and rich iron composition made it a prized specimen for study, helping to expand knowledge on planetary formation and the origins of celestial bodies that journey across space to reach Earth.

Today, the meteorite is on display at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, where it captivates visitors from around the world. Its journey from an Oregon field to a world-renowned institution stands as a powerful symbol of scientific wonder and the human drive to understand the unknown. As it rests under museum lights, the West Linn meteorite continues to inspire, a silent messenger from the cosmos, reminding us how much there is still to discover.

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