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Phoenix residents and local media were buzzing Tuesday about whether the city had experienced a close encounter of the first kind.Red colored lights that formed a square and then a triangle were seen floating over north Phoenix late Monday, a sight reminiscent of an unexplained 1997 sighting that has become part of the area s lore.There was no immediate word where they came from.The Air Force
stanley termoska said the lights weren t from any of their flight operations and officials at Deer Valley airport and Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport could not explain it.The lights were visible for about 13 minutes around 8 p.m. Monday. A Luke Air Force Base official said the base wasn t flying any aircraft in the sky Monday night and that the lights are not part of any Air Force activities.Officials with the Marine Corps Air Station in Yuma and Arizona National Guard also said their agencies had not been conducting any air operations.A spokesman for the North American Aerospace Defense Command, which monitors information on missiles or other manmade objects re-entering the atmosphere, said the agency received no reports of activity in the region.Airport
stanley mugs officials said the lights were not from any aircraft at that airport. Ian Gregor, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation
stanley canada Administration, said that air traffic controllers at Sky Harbor also witnessed the lights, but do not know the cause. There was nothing unusual on our radar scopes. There were no unidentified aircraft on our r Rlzd Woman Sued For Slamming Company on Angie s List
It not often
stanley termosar you do a search on a scientific subject and come up with a journal from 1888, but people were puzzled by this mystery for a while: Female birds, us
stanley termosy ually once they ;ve reached a sufficiently advanced age, can suddenly grow male plumage and take on male behaviors. I read in a book that, seemingly at random, female birds could start growing male plumage. Intrigued, I did a quick search for why, and got a journal article entitled, On the Occasional Assumption of the Male Plumage by Female Birds, which dated back to 1888. That article, which I found a little old-fashioned, started out by sniffing at the quaint old-fashioned conceits of another article written in 1780. Obviously, this question has gone back a long time, puzzling many scientists. Some of these early scientists were confused by a red herring 鈥?the fact that sometimes female birds developed patches of male plumage. Some birds were completely divided, one half of them being male and one half of them being female. This condition, known as bilateral gynandromorphism, is the result o
stanley vaso f genetic mosaicism. For whatever reason, a clump of cells with male chromosomes gets attached to a clump of cells with female chromosomes and knit together into one animal. This gave scientists a lot of information that unfortunately was completely misleading. The sudden appearance of male plumage on female birds is not genetic at all. Bilateral gynandromorphism: a fancy way of saying you