Chinese UFO Research Centre Puzzles Scientists
China Daily
People's Daily Online
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Guiyang, Guizhou (China):
Authorities in Guiyang, capital of Guizhou Province, announced Monday that they had received 160 million yuan (US$20 million) from a Taiwan-based company to construct a UFO research base.
Some people in the city's Baiyun District believe they were visited by aliens in 1994, and with this new research base, they hope to reproduce the mysterious moment, through photos and historical documentation. On November 30, 1994, more than 27 hectares of masson pines in a forest farm in the district mysteriously fell down.
However, nearby plastic shelters stood intact. An adjacent truck factory reported similar enigmas:
steel pipes were strangely broken; a huge truck was found more than 20 metres away from its original place; an employee on the night shift said he had been pulled up in the air by an "unknown" force. Wang Fangchen, a biologist who visited the site right after the event, said the city's plan to build a UFO research base is "ridiculous." Li Jing, a senior astronomer with the National Astronomical Observatories, echoed the view.
Dec 06, 2005
China Daily
People's Daily Online
________________
Guiyang, Guizhou (China):
Authorities in Guiyang, capital of Guizhou Province, announced Monday that they had received 160 million yuan (US$20 million) from a Taiwan-based company to construct a UFO research base.
Some people in the city's Baiyun District believe they were visited by aliens in 1994, and with this new research base, they hope to reproduce the mysterious moment, through photos and historical documentation. On November 30, 1994, more than 27 hectares of masson pines in a forest farm in the district mysteriously fell down.
However, nearby plastic shelters stood intact. An adjacent truck factory reported similar enigmas:
steel pipes were strangely broken; a huge truck was found more than 20 metres away from its original place; an employee on the night shift said he had been pulled up in the air by an "unknown" force. Wang Fangchen, a biologist who visited the site right after the event, said the city's plan to build a UFO research base is "ridiculous." Li Jing, a senior astronomer with the National Astronomical Observatories, echoed the view.
Dec 06, 2005