Not really. A fly is the best likely explanation for the shape. If you observe the video you will note that the background is not stable at all and likely reflects pixel processing. That same effect should show up with the object and it does not. I have no doubt that careful work will merely confirm exactly that.
It is also going much too fast of course.
It is still good to note that eyeballs are constantly searching for anomalies.
.
Watch: Triangular UFO Filmed Over the Moon?
Using a telescopic lens to film the moon, a UFO enthusiast in Texas believes he may have captured footage of a triangular craft flying across the lunar surface! At first, the brief clip seems to simply show a strange view of the many craters which dot the lunar landscape. However the serene perspective is pierced when suddenly a dark object can be seen flying through the air above the moon on the left side of the video. Watch the remarkable video and see if you can figure out what the object could be.
Using a telescopic lens to film the moon, a UFO enthusiast in Texas believes he may have captured footage of a triangular craft flying across the lunar surface! At first, the brief clip seems to simply show a strange view of the many craters which dot the lunar landscape. However the serene perspective is pierced when suddenly a dark object can be seen flying through the air above the moon on the left side of the video. Watch the remarkable video and see if you can figure out what the object could be.
Is this proof of ALIENS? Researcher spots triangular black shape hovering above the moon's surface and is convinced it's a UFO
- Researcher took the video with a telescopic camera in Texas
- He believes the triangle is a UFO or possibly a formation of them
- However many are sceptical of the viral video believing it's just debris
Could this be a sign of alien life?
Footage
of the moon from a telescopic video appears to shows a triangular black
shape hovering above the surface of the moon - and many believe it may
well be a UFO.
The video was
originally taken by a man called Steve - a director working at a major
corporate jet fleet in Texas who has started his own research channel.
Footage of the moon from a telescopic
video appears to shows a triangular black shape hovering above the
surface of the moon - and many believe it may well be a UFO
At first the object is nearly
impossible to spot amid the bumps and lumps of the moon's surface in the
hazy video but when Steve zooms in the triangular entity becomes
clearer
The
enthusiast then shared the interesting clip with Tyler from American
YouTube channel Secureteam10 who was keen to disseminate the footage.
Steve writes on the video: 'While video imaging the moon in this area I caught a craft flying above the moon surface'.
At
first the object is nearly impossible to spot amid the bumps and lumps
of the moon's surface in the hazy video but when Steve zooms in the
triangular entity becomes clearer.
Tyler,
in his commentary of the video states that it could well be a massive
triangle or a formation of objects - 'not uncommon with our military
jets here on earth'.
Tyler, in his commentary of the video
states that it could well be a massive triangle or a formation of
objects - 'not uncommon with our military jets here on earth'
However, while the video has attracted
over 54,000 views, many remain sceptical. 'Looks like falling debris of
some sort,' one writes
However, while the video has attracted over 54,000 views, many remain sceptical.
'Looks like falling debris of some sort,' one writes.
Another agrees: 'Space junk is a big problem.'
Some believed there is a much more mundane explanation. 'It's a fly on the lens,' a commentator writes.
Secureteam10
is a research team that breaks the 'boundaries of underground
reporting, bringing exposure of the alien phenomenon and those trying to
hide it back to the masses,' according to its Twitter account.
Secureteam10 is a research team that
breaks the 'boundaries of underground reporting, bringing exposure of
the alien phenomenon and those trying to hide it back to the masses,'
according to its Twitter account
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