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Anyone worried that the world will come to an end Friday (Dec. 21) can scan the heavens online this week for any signs of death from above. The online Slooh Space Camera will broadcast a series of live cosmic views all week, beginning today (Dec. 17). The free webcasts will help the public keep watch for any monster solar storms, impending asteroid strikes or other potential agents of the so-called "Mayan apocalypse" that doomsayers claim is set for Friday.
"Rather than merely offer scientists' dismissals of the many silly doomsday scenarios that have now been heard by almost everyone in the world, and which have reportedly produced panic in Russia, Slooh will take a 'let's see for ourselves' attitude," Astronomy Magazine columnist Bob Berman, who will participate in the shows, said in a statement.
Originally posted by TheProphetMark
How are we supposed suppose to watch it when NASA already confirmed that there would be a three days of darkness upon us all starting December 21, 2012?
Originally posted by TheProphetMark
How are we supposed suppose to watch it when NASA already confirmed that there would be a three days of darkness upon us all starting December 21, 2012?
If I could, I'd be on ATS all day long but I might end up sitting in front of a candle and meditate after all.
Originally posted by gnosticagnostic
Originally posted by TheProphetMark
How are we supposed suppose to watch it when NASA already confirmed that there would be a three days of darkness upon us all starting December 21, 2012?
LMAO source please?
Question
I want to know how much truth is there in the myth of "the three days of darkness" that could fall on the earth. AND May I know if galactic alignment will occur this year? Some people say it will cause massive earthquake, tsunami, meteor impact. They say that this galactic alignment happens just once every 26,000 years.
My recent questions about the doomsday hoax have included many references to three days of darkness and to a galactic alignment that happens once every 26,000 years. Both of these ideas are false. The “three days of darkness” went viral on the internet when someone forged a document saying that NASA had confirmed this would happen in the last week of December.
David Morrison
Astrobiology Senior Scientist
December 14, 2012
reply to post by anjuna
C'mon people, I'm missing the end of the world!! This only happens once in every great while!!!