Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson is currently searching for a UFO — or some sort of space object — that has crashed near the coast of Papua New Guinea in the Pacific Ocean.
The search is part of the Galileo Project that received $1.5 million in funding from Hoskinson in March.
The project is operating an expedition led by Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb and his student Amir Siraj, who identified a “meteor of interstellar origin” that crashed into Earth from outer space back in 2014.
Yes.
Notably, the object’s interstellar origin has been verified by the U.S. Department of Defence, and it appears that the Galileo team may have already found a couple of its remnants.
In a June 16 tweet, Hoskinson confirmed he is currently with the expedition team, and noted that so far they have found strange pieces of wire and fragments that could be from the crash.
“Plenty of ground to cover and we haven't even broken out the sluice sled yet,” he said.
Wire and some aluminum. Plenty of ground to cover and we haven't even broken out the sluice sled yet https://t.co/sHKzHe3CvB
In a blog post on the same day, Loeb wrote: “Gladly, we already have one anomaly: a manganese-platinum wire with an abundance pattern that differs from common commercial products.”
Howeve at this stage, it appears to be too early to confirm if the pieces belong to some sort of “interstellar object from our cosmic neighborhood” as Loeb hopes.
Related: ‘Who the hell’ is Prometheum and what did it say to Congress about SEC compliance?
“Most importantly, I wish to know whether it was manufactured technologically by another civilization,” he said in a blog post on June 15.
How long until he announces the aliens are bullish cardano https://t.co/xFtaa0qZ6a
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