Over the Hedge by T Lewis and Michael Fry for February 02, 2019

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    alaskajohn1  almost 6 years ago

    What happened to the elephant?

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    hariseldon59  almost 6 years ago

    I can think of worse places to be probed.

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    Liverlips McCracken Premium Member almost 6 years ago

    Wrong kind of probe, Hambone.

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    wiatr  almost 6 years ago

    It’s just looking for whales.

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    the lost wizard  almost 6 years ago

    Better to cover your ass.

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    Breadboard  almost 6 years ago

    Finder’s Keepers …….

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    FassEddie  almost 6 years ago

    Keep that away from your gravity well.

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    Andrew Bosch Premium Member almost 6 years ago

    It could be a scene similar to that one in 2001: A Space Odyssey, replacing the bone with a cotton swab.

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    Perkycat  almost 6 years ago

    These guys and their imagination are so funny! (at least I think it is imagination)

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    inshadowz  almost 6 years ago

    Plus it’s ‘Oumuamua, innit? Apparently the «’» at the beginning is essential to the spelling.

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    rlaker22j  almost 6 years ago

    Blah blah blah I love the squirrel

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    Herb L 1954  almost 6 years ago

    Obviously from Uranus ;)

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    Brian Fink  almost 6 years ago

    “Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.” ― Arthur C. Clarke

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    Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo]  almost 6 years ago

    Our civilization would probably collapse if we met one. Like how the paleolithic Indians of the Americans fared against the more advanced Spaniards, British & French.

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    Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo]  almost 6 years ago

    Some information I had come across back in 2017.

    ‘Oumuamua tore into our system at nearly a perpendicular angle, traveling at up to 87.7 km/s as it whipped around the Sun; its estimated velocity as it came into our system was over 26 km/s—for comparison, typical comets in our system travel at a mere 3 km/s. ’Oumuamua’s velocity is sufficient to escape the Sun’s pull and return to interstellar space travel after its slingshot around our star. Its speed, steep approach angle, and the very wide arc it was describing mean that it could only have come from outside the solar system.

    Although too small for any human device to capture a detailed view of it, ‘Oumuamua’ was confirmed to be of a light reddish color, as is not uncommon in some of our system’s native asteroids. But readings indicate that it is rotating rapidly and is unusually elongated, with dimensions in the ratio of at least 5.3:1, which equals the most elongated objects seen before in our system; its dimensions are estimated at 180×30×30m.

    As the first known interstellar object seen in our system, a whole new space object classification had to be created: “I” for “interstellar.” ’Oumuamua’s designation is thus 1I. It is also the first of a new class of asteroids: hyperbolic asteroids.

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    Daeder  almost 6 years ago

    Scientists speculate the object originated in the Q-Tip system.

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    Bill The Nuke  almost 6 years ago

    I’d be worried about covering another portion of my body.

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