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UH? WTF? Unidentified object seen hovering over Twin Cities
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http://www.kaaltv.com/article/view/78826/ ST. PAUL (AP) _ There's an unknown object hovering in the sky over the Twin Cities, and it doesn't appear to be a bird or a plane. Meteorologist Tony Zaleski of the National Weather Service in Chanhassen says the white object appears to be higher than the white, whispy cirrus clouds, which means it's probably higher than 30-thousand feet. Although the object looked like it might be rotating, it doesn't appear to be going anywhere. Zaleski says that probably would rule out a satellite. Patrick Hogan at the Metropolitan Airports Commission says folks in the tower at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport thought it might be a weather balloon. But Zaleski says if that's true, the Weather Service didn't release it. The Federal Aviation Administration hasn't returned calls about the mysterious object. |
not a bird or plane, maybe it's
superman |
http://www.startribune.com/stories/462/4938203.html
The truth isn't the only elusive thing out there. In fact, whatever was floating over the Twin Cities area Thursday afternoon was so far out there that nobody knew definitively what it was, and by nightfall it still was unclaimed. A white -- or silver by some accounts -- dot in the sky had residents and police calling the National Weather Service office in Chanhassen, asking if they had launched the elusive "it." Metropolitan Airports Commission spokesman Patrick Hogan also got calls from reporters hunting for clues. "It's got nothing to do with us," Hogan said with a laugh. Federal Aviation Administration officials told airport folks that they thought it was a weather balloon. But Weather Service meteorologists weren't claiming it. "It's not ours, either," said meteorologist Rick Hiltbrand. The Weather Service launches its tan balloons at 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. daily. They are used to record temperature, barometric pressure and humidity. They can reach heights of 100,000 feet and float for two hours before losing pressure and exploding, Hiltbrand said. The truth is still out there. Somewhere. Howie Padilla and Terry Collins |
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Oh no its the beginning of that movie Independence Day! :1orglaugh
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