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POPSWHY IS NASA LOOKING TO NAMBLA ! Is that what their calling it the days "extraterrestrial life" So what's a matter Micheal Jackson won't return a call . for those who might not know, I read that Carl Sagan was a lover of young boys !
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POPSEsoterica Feng Shui Gemstones Names and Numbers The Twelve Bodies of Man Solar System Beings Your Ascension Sign Chakras, Aging, and the Inner Earth The Zodiac is in Your Hand The Merkaba Planetary Opposites Planets, Signs, and Numbers
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POPSAleister CROWLEY: astrology and birth chart Map of the Heavens, Planets, Astrological Chart, Horoscope Aleister CROWLEY, born October 12, 1875 at 11:42 PM in Leamington (United Kingdom) Sun in 19°14 Libra, AS in 8°00 Leo, Moon in 22°48 Pisces, MC in 16°25 Aries Numerology: Birthpath 7
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POPSCosmic crash unmasks dark matter It looks as if it is being seen through lots of little lenses. And each of these lenses represents a piece of dark matter. Astronomers used the Chandra X-ray telescope to map ordinary matter in the merging clusters, mostly in the form of hot gas, which glows brightly in X-rays. As the two clusters that formed MACSJ0025 merged at speeds of millions of kilometres per hour, hot gas in the two clusters collided and slowed down. However, the dark matter kept on going, passing right through the smash-up. The latest astronomical observations suggest that dark matter makes up some 23% of the Universe. Ordinary matter - such as the galaxies, gas, stars and planets - makes up just 4%. The remaining 73% is made up of another mysterious quantity; dark energy, which is responsible for speeding up the expansion of the cosmos.
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POPSFarmer's Almanac Predicts Frigid Winter of '08-/09 This prediction has more intelligence than all the pseudo scientists employed by the loony left. For the sun is taken into consideration. Gather up your woolies folks, and let's hope Algore freezes his arse off in his obscene energy wasting mansion.
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POPSIce Volcanoes of Titan May Habor Life For almost thirty years, scientists have known that complex carbon compounds called tholins exist on comets and in the atmospheres of the outer planets. Theoretically, tholins might interact with water in a process called hydrolysis to produce complex molecules similar to those found on the early Earth. Could tholins formed in Titan's atmosphere react with liquid water temporarily exposed by meteor impacts or ice volcanoes to produce potentially prebiotic complex organic molecules — before the water freezes? Laboratory research by Catherine Neish, a graduate student working on her doctorate in planetary science at the University of Arizona, suggests, not without controversy, however, that, over a period of days, compounds similar to tholins can be react with water at near-freezing temperatures.