So check this out guys, what if I told you that there's a 13,000 year old satellite floating around earths orbit? You'd call me crazy, of course, but the answer may be a little more "real" than you think.
In 1899, Tesla picked up an electronic signal that he believed to have been from space. Along with that, in 1920, a group of college students who were messing around with a ham radio also picked up a signal from space. Sadly, due to lack of technology, they were not able to decode the message.
Then in 1960, the North American System Listening Station picked up an unidentified satellite on radar.
R.Johnson director of the Adler Planetarium said:
"The object does not even have the decency to maintain a regular schedule like any other heavenly body or man made object we have ever seen. It appears some nights and some nights it does not. "
By the look of the satellite, there is no way that it's American or Russian. It doesn't even look of this technological era.
Though, this case was never made public, soon after soviet and American astronauts began taking photos that captured the satellite. The pictures soon leaked and NASA closed the case on it. Claiming it as fiction.
Those who believe in it's existence, which is a growing number by the generation, say it's still up there. Waiting for us to explore it.
Another theory is that the Black knight satellite is Pakal spacecraft. Pakal was a Mayan king who is said to have been the first astronaut (or at least illistrated astronaut).
Taylor further research:
Looks like a bit of burned wood from the yard waste pile, placed on top of one of those sheets of extra-heavy notepaper with the patterned backgrounds commonly used for wedding invitations, which can be bought for about ten cents a sheet at office supply stores or printer's shops, photographed with the camera held too close. And the Mayan astronaut stuff? Frantic attempts to grasp at phantom straws with palsied and atrophied hands.
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