All posts tagged: Mystery

Area 51 Mystery Jet Caught On Thermal Camera Sparks Sixth-Gen Stealth Fighter Speculation

Area 51 Mystery Jet Caught On Thermal Camera Sparks Sixth-Gen Stealth Fighter Speculation

The military aviation and defense news blog The Aviationist has spent years tracking mysterious aircraft activity around U.S. restricted airspace. Its latest report highlights a thermal image that may reveal a previously unseen next-generation stealth fighter jet design featuring cranked-kite wings and canards near Area 51. “Had to update this composite image with the latest mysterious aircraft. We have reported on all of them over the years, starting 12 years ago with the Amarillo and Wichita sightings, then the January 2026 image by Uncanny Expeditions, and now the most recent one by Project Fear,” The Aviationist wrote on X. Had to update this composite image with the latest mysterious aircraft. We have reported on all of them over the years, starting 12 years ago with the Amarillo and Wichita sightings, then the January 2026 image by Uncanny Expeditions, and now the most recent one by Project Fear.… pic.twitter.com/d7AeMwI6SO — The Aviationist (@TheAviationist) June 5, 2026 The Aviationist cited a thermal image shared by the Project Fear YouTube channel earlier this week. The Aviationist reached out …

Mystery over Sturgeon’s luxury hotel stay at height of SNP fraud

Mystery over Sturgeon’s luxury hotel stay at height of SNP fraud

As Covid-19 restrictions were lifted and the chaos of lockdown eased, Nicola Sturgeon might have felt she deserved a reward. But even by the standards of Scotland’s elite, the then-first minister chose to celebrate in extravagant style. In July 2021, Ms Sturgeon and Peter Murrell, her husband, booked the Isle of Eriska Hotel and Spa on the west coast, one of Scotland’s most exclusive destinations. As Murrell awaits sentencing for embezzling SNP funds, The Telegraph can reveal details of the trip, amid unanswered questions on how it was paid for. Other guests staying at the five-star island retreat said the pair “wined and dined in a very lavish manner”. One told The Telegraph that they were “astonished” at the high-value wines and champagne the then-SNP leader and chief executive were drinking. Other hotel guests said the pair ‘wined and dined in a very lavish manner’ Less than a week after that visit, police launched Operation Branchform, an investigation that culminated in Murrell’s conviction for embezzling £400,000 from the SNP. Insiders told The Telegraph that police …

‘Doo Doo Water and a Few Needles’: Inside the Mystery of the New York City Manhole Prowlers

‘Doo Doo Water and a Few Needles’: Inside the Mystery of the New York City Manhole Prowlers

In recent days, a fantastical question has captured the attention of New Yorkers and local tabloids: Who is popping in and out of manholes across the city, and what are they doing in the sewer system? On May 5, security footage showed three people wearing hip waders entering a manhole in Queens. Then, in the early morning hours of May 29, another camera captured a group of people exiting a manhole in Brooklyn. The same day, a different group was seen emerging from another Brooklyn manhole, miles away from the first location. Some wore headlamps, and some were carrying what appeared to be shovels and flashlights. The New York Police Department has speculated that the men are scavengers looking for jewelery, guns, or other valuables. But no one knows for sure, so WIRED consulted with several urban exploration content creators active in New York City. On platforms like TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram, “urbex” creators—typically teenage boys or young men who film together in small groups—explore abandoned or difficult-to-access spaces like defunct factories, dilapidated mansions, and …

Fossil discovery solves 500-million-year-old mystery about the dawn of animal life

Fossil discovery solves 500-million-year-old mystery about the dawn of animal life

Tiny honeycomb-like colonies from southern China have opened a long-running gap in the story of animal life. For decades, bryozoans seemed oddly absent from the Cambrian explosion, the burst of diversification that filled ancient seas with most major animal groups. These fossils suggest they were there all along. The new material comes from the early Cambrian Xiannüdong Formation in Shaanxi Province and dates to about 520 million years ago. In Nature, an international team describes new specimens of Protomelission gatehousei and a newly named species, Dayingomelission hexaclitia, preserved in unusual detail. That matters because bryozoans, tiny filter-feeding invertebrates that live in colonies, have long posed an evolutionary problem. Their fossil record seemed to begin much later, in the Ordovician, even though molecular analyses had pointed to a much earlier origin. Nearly every other major animal phylum had a Cambrian representative. Bryozoans appeared to be the exception. “Bryozoa has been the elephant in the room of Cambrian palaeontology for a long time.” said co-author Dr Timothy Topper of Northwest University and the Swedish Museum of Natural …

The Sainsbury’s Egg Mystery: Why Your Next Carton Might Look Completely Different

The Sainsbury’s Egg Mystery: Why Your Next Carton Might Look Completely Different

Retailer Sainsbury’s has pledged to stop selling brown eggs under their own brand as part of their sustainability program, moving to white-shelled versions instead. The second-largest UK supermarket chain cited animal welfare and carbon emissions when announcing the decision. But why don’t white and brown eggs have the same environmental impact, and why are eggshells different colours to begin with? Why are brown eggs worse for the environment? An assessment by SAC Consulting for Sainsbury’s found that brown eggs have a 12.7% higher carbon footprint than white eggs, as the hens that produce brown eggs are larger and eat more food. Sainsbury’s said the change would therefore “indirectly reduce demand on land and water used to grow feed crops, as well as the amount of manure produced” by the chickens. Chicken manure emits greenhouse gases, methane and nitrous oxide as well as ammonia, which can have “detrimental impacts on the environment and… animal and human health”, per Aberystwyth University’s Farming Connect. “White‑feathered hens typically live longer, eat less feed and lay eggs for longer, cutting …

A ‘mystery beetle’ is devouring North Carolina’s precious blueberries

A ‘mystery beetle’ is devouring North Carolina’s precious blueberries

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. By signing up, you confirm you are 16+, will receive newsletters and promotional content and agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time. North Carolina’s blueberries may have a beetle problem. For the first time, scientists in the Tarheel State have documented the presence of Prionus imbricornus eating blueberry bushes. This longhorn beetle and its larvae can chomp their way through the state’s valuable blueberry fields. The findings are described in a study published this week in the Journal of Integrated Pest Management.  Blueberries are native to North Carolina, but were not cultivated until 1935. The state is the sixth largest blueberry producer in the United States, and the blueberry industry is valued at roughly $70 million. Protecting the plants from pests is crucial, as blueberries are considered one of North Carolina’s most valuable and desirable crops.  Several species including the blueberry maggot (Rhagoletis mendax), plum …

The mystery of Alaska’s orange rivers is finally solved

The mystery of Alaska’s orange rivers is finally solved

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. By signing up, you confirm you are 16+, will receive newsletters and promotional content and agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time. Alaska’s Arctic rivers have a big, orange problem. Previously clear rivers are turning a cloudy orange color due to iron particles, and it’s more than unsightly. The particles can suffocate fish and choke insects, threatening the food web and ecosystem as a whole.  Scientists have long pointed to previously frozen soil beginning to thaw as the potential culprit behind the contamination of rivers in northern Alaska’s remote Brooks Range, and a study recently published in the Communications Earth & Environment proves it. The research also shows two distinct ways that this thawing soil is rusting the rivers and can help scientists predict where the damage is likely to spread next.  “You’d think if any ecosystem could hide from the effects of warming and …

June’s New Mystery and Thrillers, From High-Stakes Competition to Psychological Suspense

June’s New Mystery and Thrillers, From High-Stakes Competition to Psychological Suspense

After I saw that “super El Niño” was getting mentioned in the news, I decided to create myself a 2026 summer TBR list for all the armchair reading I’ll be doing to avoid the outside inferno. Thankfully, publishing has gone above and beyond in dropping a ton of new mysteries and thrillers to get your sleuthing on with. From the recent fun podcast format trope to a high-stakes competition, there is plenty of entertainment for a wide range of tropes and moods in the genre. There’s also fictional true crime writers returning home, queer YA, disaster gays in NY, the missing women trope, Indigenous YA mystery, a Hollywood actor who may have killed his Bollywood wife, twisty thrillers, and more mysteries to solve! Names Have Been Changed by Yu-Mei Balasingamchow For fans of fictional podcasts, criminals on the run, crime novels, and literary fiction! Our narrator, Ophir, is finally telling her tale of multiple crimes, life regrets, secrets held, and most importantly, her ten years on the lam—all on a podcast! Follow her across continents …

To infinity and beyond for Taylor Swift? Mystery billboards spark Toy Story 5 rumours

To infinity and beyond for Taylor Swift? Mystery billboards spark Toy Story 5 rumours

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Could it be that Toy Story 5 has a “Blank Space” to fill on their cast list? Taylor Swift fans are certainly hoping so. Reports that the pop superstar will have a role in the forthcoming animated film are yet to be confirmed, but that isn’t stopping Swifties from speculating – and this weekend’s unveiling of new promotional billboards will no doubt fuel the rumours. The billboards feature the giant letters “TS” and while admittedly it serves as an acronym both for Swift’s name and the film franchise, the Toy Story title has never been abbreviated as such. Also worth nothing is the fact the letters are surrounded by 13 clouds, which is known to be Swift’s favourite number. On Saturday (30 May), the official Instagram account for Pixar shared a video of cowgirl Jessie (voiced by Joan Cusack) dancing on …

Was Amazon’s Tokenmaxxing Fiasco Behind Claude’s 0M Mystery Bill?

Was Amazon’s Tokenmaxxing Fiasco Behind Claude’s $500M Mystery Bill?

Axios reported this week that an unnamed Anthropic enterprise client managed to run up roughly $500 million in Claude charges in a single month after failing to put usage limits on employee licenses. The company was not named, but we suspect Blue Origin might not be the only thing that blew up for Jeff Bezos this month. Just as the Axios report landed with the $500M tidbit, Amazon was shutting down an internal AI-usage leaderboard after employees reportedly began “tokenmaxxing” – routing unnecessary work through AI tools to inflate their usage scores. The result was a perfect case study in what happens when corporate America turns AI adoption into a metric, then acts surprised when employees optimize for the metric instead of the work. Whether or not Amazon was the mystery Claude whale, its internal AI experiment shows exactly how a runaway enterprise AI bill can happen. The $500M Claude Mystery The Axios item was brief, but extraordinary:; An AI consultant tells Axios one of their clients recently spent half a billion dollars in a single month …