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Why a Harvard professor thinks he may have found fragments of an alien spacecraft

www.independent.co.uk Harvard professor ‘found fragments of alien spacecraft’ at the bottom of the Pacific

A daring deep sea search has found tiny pieces of a mysterious meteor that crashed to Earth in 2014. The ‘alien hunter of Harvard’ tells Bevan Hurley the discovery may be evidence of an advanced extraterrestrial civilization visiting Earth

Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb believes he has found fragments of an alien spacecraft from a meteor dubbed IM1, which crashed off the coast of Papua New Guinea in 2014.

He oversaw a $1.5 million expedition that found 50 tiny spherules, believed to be a steel-titanium alloy, on the Pacific Ocean floor. These objects are much stronger than the iron found in regular meteors, leading Loeb to suggest they may have interstellar origins or could have been made by an advanced extraterrestrial civilization. The findings will be taken to Harvard for further testing.

Loeb, known as the "alien hunter of Harvard," has been controversial for his belief in extraterrestrial life, previously claiming a space rock visible in 2017 was an alien-built technology.

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