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China says it may have received signals from aliens

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livescience@smartbrief.com

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Thu, Jun 16, 2022 04:52 PM

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China says it may have received signals from aliens | $17 billion shipwreck near Colombia is remarka

China says it may have received signals from aliens | $17 billion shipwreck near Colombia is remarkably preserved, new photos reveal | One in 500 men may carry an extra sex chromosome (most without knowing it) Created for {EMAIL} | [Web Version]( June 16, 2022 CONNECT WITH LIVESCIENCE  [Facebook]( [Twitter](  [LIVESCIENCE]( Amazing science every day [SIGN UP]( ⋅ [WEBSITE](  [] Top Science News [] [China says it may have received signals from aliens]( [China says it may have received signals from aliens]( (NAO/FAST) China is claiming that its enormous "Sky Eye" telescope may have picked up trace signals from a distant alien civilization, according to a recently posted and subsequently deleted report by Chinese scientists. Astronomers at Beijing Normal University have discovered "several cases of possible technological traces and extraterrestrial civilizations from outside the Earth," according to a report published Tuesday (June 14) in Science and Technology Daily, the official newspaper of China's Ministry of Science and Technology. Full Story: [Live Science]( (6/15) [LinkedIn]( [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [Email]( Just the Facts, Ma'am "I stopped watching TV news a year ago, so sick of the bias everywhere. But in doing so, I was out of the loop. I decided to give 1440 a try & I've not been disappointed. Finally, Walter Cronkite style reporting! Just the facts. I also love that I can click a link to see more on many stories. Keep up the good work!" [Join for free now](. ADVERTISEMENT: [] History & Archaeology [] [$17 billion shipwreck near Colombia is remarkably preserved, new photos reveal]( [$17 billion shipwreck near Colombia is remarkably preserved, new photos reveal]( (Armada de la República de Colombia) New images of one of the world’s most valuable shipwrecks show its remarkable preservation on the seafloor off the coast of Colombia — while the search has revealed two more historic shipwrecks in the same area. The latest photographs and video of the wreck of the San José treasure galleon were released by the Colombian navy on June 6. Full Story: [Live Science]( (6/16) [LinkedIn]( [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [Email]( [] Your Health [] [One in 500 men may carry an extra sex chromosome (most without knowing it)]( [One in 500 men may carry an extra sex chromosome (most without knowing it)]( (BSIP / Contributor via Getty Images) As many as one in 500 men may carry an extra sex chromosome — either an X or a Y — but very few of them likely know about it, a new study suggests. The research, published June 9 in the journal Genetics in Medicine, included data from more than 207,000 men who provided information to the U.K. Biobank, a repository of genetic and health data from half a million U.K.-based participants. Typically, males carry one X- and one Y-shaped sex chromosome in each of their cells, but among the study participants, there were 213 men who carried an extra X chromosome and 143 that had an extra Y. Full Story: [Live Science]( (6/15) [LinkedIn]( [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [Email]( [] Astronomy & Astrophysics [] [Baby Jupiter got so big by eating other baby planets]( [Baby Jupiter got so big by eating other baby planets]( (NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS) Jupiter's innards are full of the remains of baby planets that the gas giant gobbled up as it expanded to become the behemoth we see today, scientists have found. The findings come from the first clear view of the chemistry beneath the planet's cloudy outer atmosphere. Despite being the largest planet in the solar system, Jupiter has divulged very little about its inner workings. Telescopes have captured thousands of images of the swirling vortex clouds in the gas giant's upper atmosphere, but these Van Gogh-esque storms also act as a barrier blocking our view of what's below. Full Story: [Live Science]( (6/16) [LinkedIn]( [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [Email]( [] Bones [] [Amphibian 'death pit' filled with 8,000 bones unearthed in Iron Age village]( [Amphibian 'death pit' filled with 8,000 bones unearthed in Iron Age village]( (MOLAHeadlandInfrastructure) A death pit of 8,000 frog and toad bones dating back at least 2,000 years has archaeologists in England stumped as to how the shattered amphibian corpses got there, with ideas ranging from death by cold to a nasty nosedive to a disease killer. "This is a puzzling and unexpected find, which we are still trying to fully understand," Vicki Ewens, senior archaeozoologist at the Museum of London Archaeology, said in a statement. "This accumulation of frog remains may have been caused by a number of different factors, possibly interacting over a long period of time." Full Story: [Live Science]( (6/16) [LinkedIn]( [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [Email]( [] Poll Question [] POLL QUESTION: Do you think China's "Sky Eye" telescope really detected trace signals from a distant alien civilization? (Read about the potentially extraterrestrial signals [here]() [Vote]( [Yes, I'm sure of it!]( [Vote]( [Well, I think it's possible, anyway...]( [Vote]( [No, there must be another explanation](   [Sign Up]( | [Update Profile]( | [Unsubscribe]( [Privacy Policy]( | [Cookies Policy]( | [Terms and Conditions]( CONTACT US: [FEEDBACK](mailto:livescience@smartbrief.com) | [ADVERTISE]( Future US LLC © 1100 13th St. NW, Suite 1000, Washington, DC 20005

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