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The Book of the Bizarre: Freaky Facts and Strange Stories

Page 17

by Ventura, Varla


  When questioned about the nature of the UFOs sighted in Texas in January 2008, a witness claimed the spacecraft was “bigger than a Wal-Mart.”

  FOO FIGHTERS

  During World War II, both Axis and Allied fighter pilots reported seeing globes of colored light streaking through in the night sky. Everyone had a name for them; Americans called them foo fighters, a nickname based on a saying from a comic strip character: “Where there's foo, there's fire.” The mysterious foo fighters were said to fly in formation with great speed and precision.

  THE MYSTERIOUS FACE OF MARS

  In 1978, NASA's Viking 2 spacecraft was wandering around on Mars, taking pictures of the planet's craggy surface and transmitting them back to earth. Mission controllers watching the camera's movement spotted what resembled a huge, mile-long human face carved into the red rock. The image of the face, with shadows giving the illusion of a nose, mouth, and eyes, was released to the American public days later to great excitement and fanfare. Was there intelligent life on Mars? Was the face some sort of message to humans, left for us to find by crafty aliens?

  A UFO AT O'HARE?

  On November 7, 2006, employees at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago reported an “unidentified object” hovering over gate C17. Multiple witnesses described a small aircraft that whirred in place for a second and then quickly darted east and disappeared. According to reports, it resembled a small metallic Frisbee and had no lights or identifying marks. The National UFO Reporting Center's report quoted another witness: “All employees are very familiar with aircraft around the world's busiest airport—this was nothing we are familiar with. As a side note as it is probably unrelated, the next aircraft into that gate was experiencing electrical problems.”

  The U.K.'s first official study of UFOs, commissioned by the Ministry of Defence in 1950, was called the Flying Saucer Working Party, or FSWP. Writer Nick Pope deemed it “arguably the most marvellously named committee in the history of the civil service.”

  Novelist Whitley Strieber, author of Communion and Transformation and self-proclaimed abduction survivor, believes that aliens exist to help humans grow spiritually.

  “MOONLIGHT IS SCULPTURE; SUNLIGHT IS PAINTING.” —NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE

  DID YOU KNOW . . . ?

  It takes 29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes, and 3 seconds for the moon to go through all of its phases, from one full moon to the next. This time period is close to the length of a month—which is why the word “month” is derived from the Old English word for “moon.”

  The light that comes from the moon is sunlight reflected off the moon's surface. It takes 1¼ seconds for the light to travel to earth.

  The moon only reflects 7 percent of the light it receives from the sun.

  The moon is smaller than any planet in the solar system, but relative to the size of the planets they orbit, our moon is the largest of any planet's moons.

  The moon is 2,160 miles in diameter—about a quarter of the earth's diameter. If the earth were as big as a fist, the moon would be the size of a stamp—placed ten feet away.

  The average temperature on the moon is minus 283 degrees to minus 266 degrees Fahrenheit.

  Since the moon spins once on its axis every 271/3 days—the same amount of time it takes to go around the earth once—we end up seeing only one side of the moon (about 59 percent of its surface).

  The side of the moon we always see is called the near side. The side we never see from earth is the far side. (That's probably where cartoonist Gary Larsen got the name for the comic strip.)

  There is no sound on the moon. Nor are there weather, wind, clouds, or colors at sunrise and sunset.

  If you weigh 120 pounds on earth, you would weigh 20 pounds—or 1/6 of your earth weight—on the moon.

  A 3-foot jump on earth would carry you 18 feet, 9 inches, on the moon!

  Astronauts have brought over 843 pounds of moon samples back to earth.

  The moon is moving away from the earth at a rate of about 1/8 inch a year.

  “THE MOON WAS A GHOSTLY GALLEON TOSSED UPON CLOUDY SEAS.” —ALFRED NOYES

  ONCE IN A BLUE MOON

  Where does the expression “once in a blue moon” come from? And what does the song “Blue Moon” refer to?

  According to the Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins, the term “blue moon” first appeared in England in 1528. The source was a book entitled Read Me and Be Not Wroth, which said, “If they say the mone is blew/We must believe that it is true.”

  The term “once in a blue moon” was apparently derived from this sarcastic little rhyme about the upper class. The phrase originally meant “never,” but by the early 1800s it was used to describe a very rare occurrence. This meaning is actually more correct, because two kinds of blue moons really do exist. The phenomenon of a blue moon is associated with unusual atmospheric conditions—a blue moon, or a green one, is most likely to be seen just before sunrise or just after sunset if there is a large quantity of dust or smoke in the atmosphere. The dust or smoke particles can filter out colors like red and yellow, leaving only green and blue to color the moon.

  BLUE MOON

  A modern definition of the term “blue moon” says it is the second full moon that in a calendar month. Double full moon months occur every thirty-two months or so, so clearly they are not a usual occurrence. A blue moon appeared on June 30, 2007, and will also appear on December 31, 2009, and August 31, 2012.

  Another definition of a blue moon says it is the third full moon in a season that has four full moons. In order to set the date for Easter Sunday properly, the medieval ecclesiastic calendar required a maximum of twelve full moons during the year; by calling the occasional thirteenth full moon a blue moon—meaning it didn't really count—the calendar was kept on track.

  Saying the moon is blue, serious people tell us, is like saying it is made of green cheese. But with air pollution, clouds, and ice crystals in the atmosphere, the moon does occasionally appear to be blue.

  MOON GODS

  In many ancient cultures, the sun was seen as a god and the moon as a goddess. The sun's energy is projective. Daytime is more important than nighttime. Sun gods are strong and creative; moon goddesses are mystical and mysterious.

  But to some European cultures, the sun was female and the moon was male. In the far-northern European countries, where the sun shone little or not at all during the winter months, the spring sun was welcomed as a nurturing, generating, creative—and therefore feminine—force.

  The so-called man in the moon first appeared in a Saxon folktale with his wife, the woman in the sun. Earlier, the Sumerian city Ur was named after the moon god Hur. The Babylonian moon god, Sin, was known as the father of time. His name is a contraction of the Sumerian words “Su” and “En,” meaning “the crescent moon.” Also called Nanna (“the full moon”), Sin was the father of Ishtar. The latter is said to have been the source of the voice that spoke to the Hebrew leader Moses from the famous burning bush, the divine presence on Mount Sinai, and the carver of commandments. In Iran, 4,500 years ago, the moon was worshipped as the Great Man, who incarnated on earth as a divine ruler. Even the great thirteenth-century Mongol emperor Genghis Khan traced his ancestry back to a moon god.

  The moon gods were overthrown by the sun and sky gods. Solar gods married solar goddesses and usurped the moon gods' mythologies. Conquering tribal chiefs married female shamans and stole their powers. Men mastered the horse, fire, and metallurgy, and built cities and temples. It is said that men came to fear what they couldn't see in broad daylight, under the blazing sun, so they relegated the mysteries of the night to something else they feared—woman.

  UCLA astronomer Andrea Ghez has observed supermassive black holes at the center of the Milky Way and has posited that most, if not all, galaxies have similar black holes at their cores. These cosmic giants can eat stars whole, and the one at the center of our galaxy is said to have the mass of forty suns.

  Every 100,000 years the earth's orbita
l path goes from circular to almost elliptical, altering the distance between the earth and the sun.

  Every 42,000 years the earth's tilt alters and changes the area exposed directly to the sun.

  Every 25,800 years the earth wobbles, causing solstices and equinoxes to move.

  THE MANY MOONS OF SATURN

  Saturn has thirty moons—far more than any other planet. It has so many that half of them have numbers for names: Pan, Atlas, Prometheus, Pandora, Epimetheus, Janus, Mimas, Enceladus, Tethys, Telesto, Calypso, Dione, Helene, Rhea, Titan, Hyperion, Iapetus, Phoebe, S/2000 S 1, S/2000 S 2, S/2000 S 3, S/2000 S 4, S/2000 S 5, S/2000 S 6, S/2000 S 7, S/2000 S 8, S/2000 S 9, S/2000 S 10, S/2000 S 11, and S/2000 S 12.

  THE RARE EARLY EASTER SUNDAY

  The date of the Christian Easter celebration is always the first Sunday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox (March 21). This schedule is based on the lunar calendar that Hebrew people used to identify Passover, which is why Easter Sunday moves around on the Gregorian calendar used in the United States and other Western countries today.

  Based on this formula, Easter will never fall before March 22 or after April 25.

  In 2008, Easter Sunday fall on March 23, making the earliest Easter most people will ever observe in their entire lives. The last time Easter fell that early in the year was in 1913; that means anyone age ninety-five or older in 2008 are the only people who have witnessed this exceptionally early Easter twice in their lives. It is extremely unlikely that anyone alive in 2008 will live to see another such early Easter, because the next time Easter will fall on March 23 will be in the year 2160.

  No one alive today has seen, and likely ever will see, Easter Sunday fall earlier than March 23. The last time it did so was in 1818, when it fell on March 22, and it won't fall on that date again until the year 2285.

  “There is something haunting in the light of the moon; it has all the dispassionateness of a disembodied soul, and something of its inconceivable mystery.” —JOSEPH CONRAD

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  There are countless people in past and present lives who have helped make this book the deliciously wicked little thing that it is. For starters, I would like to thank the staff at Weiser Books for their inspiration and guidance: Jan Johnson, Caroline Pincus, Maija Tollefson, Jordan Overby, Donna Linden, and Sara Gillingham. Special thanks to Amber Guetebier and Rachel Leach whose fact checking, story gathering, editorial expertise, and enthusiasm for the strange and macabre made this book possible. A big thanks to interns Rosemary Rouhana, who contributed a great deal to The Book of the Bizarre, Elise Jaguga, and Kristina Anderson. A huge thanks to Brenda Knight, who provided countless resources and encouragement. Thanks to Chris A. Ward, Alix Benedict, Giovanni Galati, Raymond Buckland, Addie Johnson, Wendy Guetebier, Dina Petterson, Marianne Jensen, the beloved Allan Topen, The Nevada City Chamber of Commerce, and Ken Pelto and the entire Education Department at the San Francisco Zoo.

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  TO OUR READERS

  Weiser Books, an imprint of Red Wheel/Weiser, publishes books across the entire spectrum of occult and esoteric subjects. Our mission is to publish quality books that will make a difference in people's lives without advocating any one particular path or field of study. We value the integrity, originality, and depth of knowledge of our authors.

  Our readers are our most important resource, and we appreciate your input, suggestions, and ideas about what you would like to see published. Please feel free to contact us, to request our latest book catalog, or to be added to our mailing list.

 

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