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Reflecting on scientific discovery, Tim Burchett cites the coelacanth, a fish thought extinct for 50 million years, as an example of how science can be proven wrong. He emphasizes the need for science to remain open to change.
At about 2,000 to 3,000 meters, when it's really dark, I would turn all the lights off on the submarine and then on again, like blinking. Often, I'd see flashes of light throughout the ocean, like lightning.
At the bottom of the Marian Trench, organisms withstand eight tons per square inch. It's an incredibly harsh environment, one of the harshest on the planet. I had 90 millimeters of titanium protecting me in my sphere.
There's about five bases that we've located at the bottom of the ocean, and they seem to be responsible for most of these UAPs. We don't know how.
One of the sightings that I had listened to this audiobook they were talking about, it wasn't this one. I think it was one of his, might have been one of his. Either way, whatever the sighting was, they saw something moving through the ocean that was bigger than a football field, and it was going 500.