Kalalau Valley Hawaii wallpaper, Over 1000 Dinosaur tracks discovered, World’s longest insect

Kalalau Valley Kauai Hawaii

Geologists discover ‘dinosaur dancefloor’ in remote American wilderness

An amazing array of footprints made by more than 1,000 dinosaurs have been uncovered on the Arizona-Utah border in the U.S.

Scientists have likened the wealth of tracks and tail-drag marks on the three-quarter acre site to a crowded ‘dinosaur dance floor.’

They believe the remote dry wilderness was once a sandy desert oasis 190 million years ago. It was then in the tropics as part of the supercontinent Pangaea.

‘We’re looking at an area much like the Sahara Desert with blowing sand dunes,’ geologist Winston Seiler reported in the international paleontology journal Palaios

Scientists say there are over a thousand tracks of as many as four species of dinosaurs. Since the footprints vary in size from just over a centimeter to 51 cm its possible the prints are of dinosaur moms and their offspring.

The world’s longest insect, a 56.7cm long stick-insect from Borneo, is revealed at the Natural History Museum

This species is new to science and has recently been named Phobaeticus chani (Chan’s Megastick is the common name).

Only three specimens of the new insect have been found so far, all from the Malaysian State of Sabah on the island of Borneo. Datuk Chan obtained the first and largest known specimen (a female) from a local collector. The other two specimens are in collections in Sabah.

I can imagine seeing it in the wild. They say it stays in the upper canopy of the forests. It would be like looking up and seeing a small tree branch start to crawl away.

UK UFO files reveal alleged attempt to shoot UFO

An American fighter pilot flying from an English air base at the height of the Cold War was ordered to open fire on a massive UFO that lit up his radar, according to an account published by Britain’s National Archives on Monday.

The fighter pilot said he was ordered to fire a full salvo of rockets at the UFO moving erratically over the North Sea — but that at the last minute the object picked up enormous speed and disappeared. The account, first published in Britain’s Daily Star newspaper more than 17 years ago and to this day unverified by military authorities, was one of many carried in the 1,500 pages the archives made available online.

Assuming, and it is a pretty huge asumption, that it was a visiting instellar alien craft. Is that anyway to welcome a possible E.T. by shooting missiles at it. Or are we just assuming that all UFOs are potentially big green slimy things with two sets of jaws that eats people.