Saturn’s moon Japet may appear completely devoid of life, but a UFO researcher believes it is home to extraterrestrial beings. The crash claim is being made after a strange structure, believed to be at least five kilometers long, was seen on Saturn’s third largest moon.
An alien researcher not only claims to have seen the structure on Iapetus, one of the 62 moons that orbit the ring giant Saturn, but added that NASA is trying to cover up the evidence.
Prominent alien hunter Scott C Waring made the claim on his ET Database blog, stating: “I was using an app on my iPhone called Saturn Atlas when I noticed a huge black structure on the moon Iapetus.
“The structure is huge, about 5 km wide, 4 km wide and 1.5 km high.
“The area is totally blurred by NASA to hide it, but it still stands out very well. I have searched for many other photos of this moon, none of which still have this structure.”
“This application uses an old NASA index that no longer has those photos there, but luckily for us, the application has not updated or changed them.
“100 percent proof that aliens exist and thrive on Saturn’s moon.”
However, skeptics and NASA say the structure and other similar findings are just the effects of pareidolia, a psychological phenomenon when the brain tricks the eyes into seeing familiar objects or shapes where they don’t exist.
NASA said: “Pareidolia is the psychological phenomenon in which people see recognizable shapes in clouds, rock formations, or other unrelated objects or data.
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One of NASA’s former senior engineers previously said that “alien UFO spacecraft” are using Saturn’s rings as a hiding place and are “proliferating” at an alarming rate.
The former NASA employee previously said that the number of spacecraft has reached “critical” levels and that authorities should monitor it.
He added that the rings have become so compact with UFOs that they are now beginning to gather around Jupiter and Neptune. In alien spacecraft they hide in Saturn’s rings.
The claim was made by Dr. Norman Bergrun, a highly respected engineer who held a position at NASA’s Ames Research Center.