NASA's Curiosity rover captured on camera a very unexpected anomaly on Mars. The object looks like a bird in flight, which, of course, caused a storm of emotions among fans of theories about extraterrestrial life. By the way, the Curiosity vehicle, which has been exploring the surface of the Red Planet for about seven years, is not the first time it takes pictures of strange objects, which systematically generates a new wave of all kinds of hypotheses. This time, the sensation was a bird allegedly soaring in the sky of Mars.
Scott Waring, an active UFO researcher on the hunt for alien sensations, immediately published his view and interpretation of the phenomenon on his own blog. His post states that the strange bird was first spotted by Argentine ufologist Marcelo Irazusta, who carefully studied images from the Mars rover. Although the presence of the bird on Mars seems completely unrealistic sight, nevertheless it is there, and it is captured in a photograph posted on the official website of NASA, reports Express.
According to Waring, between the signal from Earth and the moment of shooting passes about 13 minutes. Hence, the ufologist concludes that the large bird caught in the frame completely by accident, just flying by. In addition, Waring suggests that it may well be a UFO, as aliens, in his opinion, use a variety of shapes to build their flying machines, including the shape of a bird.
In fact, the sensational bird is nothing more than a clearly visible black spot against the sky in a black and white image called Sol 2446. Scott Waring saw in this spot a resemblance to a soaring eagle and immediately suggested two hypotheses. The first hypothesis is that there is life on the Red Planet after all. And the second hypothesis of Waring sounds too sensational: he suggests that NASA can fool everyone with their rover, which in reality is not at all on Mars, but in the Arctic archipelago on the Canadian island of Devon. The fact is that Devon is a completely deserted, cold and uninhabited island with a harsh climate, visually very similar to the surface of Mars. And it was on Devon that NASA tested its rovers before sending them to the Red Planet.