Thursday, March 20, 2014

Mermaids - True or False?






 I'm avid fan of the actress Anne Curtis and I really follow her latest show in Abs-CBN DYESEBEL, This show makes me think If Mermaid is real or not?So I came up with this articles on internet.

I saw this documentary last night and some of the information seems to make sense of an "Aquatic Ape," but the video of the boys finding a mermaid on shore, I don't believe it and here's why--The video could not have come from a camera phone because camera phones with video capability did not even exist at that time, so ergo it could not have come from a camera phone. The people in the documentary, the so-called "experts" looked like actors to me, especially Dr. Dittmeyer dude from Capetown University. I looked him up and there was no professor with that name from Capetown U. They all acted fake and the only thing that made sense to me was their timeline of ape to aquatic ape to human transition. This could have happened, but until I see a REAL body for myself, I will continue to believe that this was good makeup work or even CGI. This was a fake documentary like The Blair Witch or those Paranormal Activity movies. - Source:Aci 2 years ago


Mermaids: The Body Found makes a strong case for the existence of the mermaid, a creature with a surprisingly human evolutionary history, whose ancestral branch splits off from a shared human root. The film is science fiction, using science as a springboard into imagination and centering the story on the following real-world events:

In the early 1990s, the US Navy began a series of covert sonar tests, which were linked to mass die-offs of whales, which washed up on beaches throughout the world. For years, the Navy denied they were responsible for these beachings.
In 1997, scientists at the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) recorded a mysterious sound (called “The Bloop”) in the deep Pacific, which was thought to be organic in nature. It has never been identified.
These are facts.
Straight from Animal Planet

Source(s):

Animalplanet.com