Last week, Demi Lovato took to Instagram to share that they are Gaia's newest ambassador to their 118 million followers. Lovato's caption read, "Thrilled to be a @wearegaia ambassador. Understanding the world around us (the known and the unknown) is so exciting to me!"
As The Daily Beast has pointed out , Gaia is filled with high-quality conspiracy-theory videos on topics ranging from, yes, aliens to reptilian overlords and anti-vaxx sentiment.
Hulu Unwraps 'Solar Opposites' Xmas Special with Expletive-Riddled Music Video |
Hold onto your antlers, earthlings … the Solar Opposites crew are putting their own extraterrestrial spin on the season with the all-new episode “A Very Solar Holiday Opposites Special,” premiering Monday, November 22 on Hulu.
As fans wait for this heartwarming gift to drop down their chimneys, they can get into the spirit by pondering the musical question, “WTF Is Christmas?”
Ancient Meteorite May Have Created Large Patches of Glittering Glass in South American Desert |
Peppered across the Atacama Desert in Chile are mysterious shards of dark, gnarled glass. A total of 47-miles of the desert landscape is strewn with patches of dark silicate glass, and scientists have long wondered how the glass came to be.
Now, researchers suspect the glass may have formed from an exploding comet that entered Earth's atmosphere 12,000 years ago, reports Vishwam Sankaran for the Independent . The study was published this month in the journal Geology .
Can You Eat Sprouted Potatoes? What About Green Potatoes? | Bon Appétit
We've all been there: You ambitiously purchased the XL bag of potatoes , cooked through a few, and forgot about the rest in the back of your pantry—only to uncover something extraterrestrial-looking a couple of weeks later. What should your next move be?
The short answer: It depends. When potatoes begin to sprout, the growths (those roots, eyes, and bumps) have a high concentration of compounds called glycoalkaloids that can cause a sharp, unpleasant, bitter taste.
Exoplanets: The 'impossible planet' being observed by two Nobel laureates | USA | EL PAÍS
For the past months, astronomers Michel Mayor, 78, and Didier Queloz, 55, have been observing an "impossible planet." It's called 55 Cancri e and it is a bit bigger than Earth. It's so strange that it shouldn't exist. But there it is: 40 light years from Earth, orbiting a twin star of the Sun.
The Reader's Notebook: Carl Sagan | WMKY
November 9, 2021 -- Carl Sagan was one of the most well-known scientists of the 1970s and 1980s. He studied extraterrestrial intelligence, advocated for nuclear disarmament and co-wrote and hosted 'Cosmos: A Personal Voyage.'
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