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Dr.Koneru

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Everything posted by Dr.Koneru

  1. http://www.nandamurifans.com/forum/index.php?/topic/322215-horror-movies-made-of-real-life-stories/
  2. Fish rain: On October 24, 2009, Jamnagar witnessed an unusual phenomenon. The sky pelted fish on the residents! Though fish rain has been reported in other parts of the world, this incident is the most recent. The day remained foggy and when the mist lifted, people were surprised to find fish on the roads and even on their terraces. The authorities were left clueless after this incident.
  3. Mass bird suicides: In Jatinga, Assam, every night hundreds of birds crash themselves to death. Ornithologists have beaten their heads over it in vain. Even celebrated ornitho Dr. Salim Ali was unable to give a scientific explanation of this phenomenon. Assam's best known ornithologist Anwaruddin Choudhury concluded that the birds, mostly juveniles and local migrants, are disturbed by high velocity winds at their roost. When the disturbed birds fly towards lights as refuge they are hit with bamboo poles and killed or injured.
  4. Unexplained sounds in Ganga-Brahmputra delta: Barisal Guns are unexplained sounds that resemble a sonic boom that have been reported in many waterfront communities worldwide. In India especially, they have been heard in the delta regions of Ganga and Brahmaputra. While they resemble the sonic boom of a supersonic jet, what’s even mysterious is the fact that they have been reported from times before any aeroplanes were invented. T.D. LaTouche, a British officer wrote about them in his journal in the 1890s. He wrote, “…reports of Barisal guns occurring with the earthquake shocks, but they also are said to occur without, and to have been frequent before the big earthquake.”
  5. Aleya or marsh lights in West Bengal: Aleya (or marsh ghost-light) is the name given to an unexplained strange light phenomena occurring over the marshes as observed by the Bengali people, especially the fishermen of West Bengal and Bangladesh. This marsh light is attributed to some kind of unexplained marsh gas apparitions that confuse fishermen, make them lose their bearings, and may even lead to drowning if one decided to follow them moving over the marshes. Local communities in the region believe that these strange hovering marsh-lights are in fact Ghost-lights representing the ghosts of fisherman who died fishing.
  6. Cheer Batti, Rann of Kutch: Cheer batti (Ghost light) is an unexplained dancing light phenomena that occurs during the night. It has been reported from the Banni grasslands, the seasonal marshy wetlands and the adjoining desert of the marshy salt flats of the Rann of Kutch. There have been no scientific explanations for this occurrence. These lights appear at several places and still referred to as ‘ghost lights’.
  7. As far as the Kerala red rain is concerned, there is a mysterious microorganism that has defied identification so far. We have not been able to convincingly extract any DNA from them and Prof Louis has maintained that there is no DNA, but it can multiply at very high temperatures under high pressure conditions. I think there are all the signs of an alien bug! The Kerala red rain was preceded by a sonic boom that was heard, probably indicating that a fragment of a comet exploded in the atmosphere and unleashed the red cells that became incorporated in rain. I suspect the same could be true of the Sri Lankan rain, but I would like to have samples to confirm this. I should also say that reports of red rain are found throughout history all the way back to biblical times. I think this could be more evidence for cometary panspermia theory.” Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe, Director of the Astrobiological Center at the Buckingham University
  8. The Kerala red rain phenomenon was a blood rain (red rain) event that occurred from 25 July to 23 September 2001, when heavy downpours of red-coloured rain fell sporadically on the southern Indian state of Kerala, staining clothes pink. Yellow, green, and black rain was also reported. Coloured rain was also reported in Kerala in 1896 and several times since, most recently in June 2012. Following a light microscopy examination, it was initially thought that the rains were coloured by fallout from a hypothetical meteor burst, but a study commissioned by the Government of India concluded that the rains had been coloured by airborne spores from locally prolific terrestrial algae. It was not until early 2006 that the coloured rains of Kerala gained widespread attention when the popular media reported that Godfrey Louis and Santhosh Kumar of the Mahatma Gandhi University in Kottayam proposed a controversial argument that the coloured particles were extraterrestrial cells.Red rains were also reported from 15 November 2012 to 27 December 2012 occasionally in eastern and north-central provinces of Sri Lanka, where scientists from the Sri Lanka Medical Research Institute (MRI) are investigating to ascertain their cause.
  9. enni ruls ayina break cheyamani nee 1st rule aa
  10. imaginary ani manam anukuntunam... but there has been some unreported instances which have been the real inspiration for it annai
  11. ee concept medane ga Interstellar tesadu Nolan
  12. retri nunchi raining ya... no internet ippudu kuda mobile nunchi ochanu.. ayina whatsapp lo message badulu phone ki call cheyochu ga
  13. Definite ga.. kakunte naatho patu ga Google kuda ravaali lopaliki
  14. frreshh ga tala s ayanu.. kumedam
  15. bza - hyd ki up & down flight ticket book chesi pampu ochi area cover chesi return ochesta
  16. Vinay Google la discussion as of now
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