Female shark learns to reproduce without males after years alone0
- Earth Mysteries, From Around the Web
- January 20, 2017
Who needs men? A female shark separated from her long-term mate has developed the ability to have babies on her own.
Who needs men? A female shark separated from her long-term mate has developed the ability to have babies on her own.
Heavy rains in central Australia have brought to light a mysterious alien looking bug hatching from years of obscurity.
Giant squids are easily faked, but this one from Japan is a real one.
Found 30 metres underground at a coal mine, they are dubbed Jurassic pearls or the marbles of a Siberian colossus. The ten spheres are around half the size of a human, a metre or so in diameter, and almost perfectly round and smooth. To add to the mystery, they change color after rain. What are they?
In the tiny Arctic hamlet of Igloolik, Nunavut, hunters say a mysterious sound, seemingly coming from the bottom of the sea, is driving wildlife away.
THIS chilling sound had scientists spooked after it was heard coming from the deepest part of the ocean.
Are there really Pyramids at Antarctica?
15 years ago, a strange man named Mel Waters called in to the Art Bell radio program, claiming he had discovered a mysterious and infinite hole on his property near Ellensburg, Washington.
Dulce, New Mexico is located right on the Colorado-New Mexico border. It’s a quaint town, with a population just under 3,000. It’s the tribal headquarters of the Jicarilla Apache Reservation. It’s also the alleged location of a secret underground alien base.
Today, the city of Samarkand in Uzbekistan is relatively remote, known mostly for its magnificent medieval ruins. But over a millennium ago, it was one of the richest cities on the infamous trade route known as the Silk Road. Back in the 600s CE, that route was called simply “the road to Samarkand.”