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4 SCARY BLOB CREATURES - real or fake?

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PLEASE SEND 'REAL OR FAKE' submissions to [email protected] ( Please don't make submissions in comment section).
Hey Guys Bill here! Hey, do you remember that old movie called "The Blob?" I’ve watched it more than once and can tell you it’s really scary. Maybe that’s what you guys are thinking when you send me real life blob creature pictures - I don’t know… But what I do know is that I have gone through all of them and her are 4 Favorites to show you - sent in from viewers just like you.
Mystery Ocean Blob
On April 25, 2012, technicians were operating an underwater survey of oil drilling equipment at a depth of over 5000 feet. Everything was running smoothly until suddenly, a strange and mysterious blob appeared in the video feed. Startled, the technicians tried to follow it, but it moved out of their range of view. They thought they had lost it, but then it came back. And for the next few minutes gave them a spine chilling show of all it’s parts!
When the video was first shown to the world, no one could figure out what it was. Some people thought it might be whale placenta. Others claimed it was fishing net. But in reality, it was confirmed by scientists to be a very rare jellyfish.
It’s official name is Deepstaria Enigmatica - a rarely seen Jellyfish first described in 1967. Not much is known about this creature except it lives in mostly Artic waters and usually resides at depths ranging from 800 to 1800 meters or about 2600 to 5900 feet.
THE RAIN BLOB
It was a rainy August 7, 1994 in Oakville, Washington (USA). It looked like one of the normal downpours the town often gets in the late summer. But this storm brought more than just water. It also pelted the ground with countless gelatinous mysterious blobs!
No one could identify these strange gooey visitors but when townspeople began to get sick, the blobs were sent out for examination. When the results came back the news was shocking. Not only did the blobs contain human white blood cells, but bacteria from the human digestive system as well.
Many commenters point to the small tadpole like creatures inside the goo, but to this day, no one has been able to fully identify exactly what these rain blobs really are. Or where they came from. Lesson learned? When in Oakville, Washington, always wear a raincoat.
INVASION OF THE BACKYARD YELLOW BLOBS
Over the course of a few days last summer, David Yost, a horticulturist at a garden center in Virginia, received dozens of phone calls from frightened homeowners. The homeowners said they were frightened by bright yellow blobs invading their yards.
Yost went out and inspected one of the blobs. He took samples and snapped pictures of the creepy looking slime. Were they dangerous? Were they harmful to touch. Could they snatch your body?
Not Likely...
Yost had seen all this before. What the homeowners were experiencing were called Dog Vomit Slime. It is a fungus offically named Fuligo Septica. It is a species of Plasmodial slime mold. It is also known as scrambled egg slime.
It’s called Dog Vomit Slime sometimes because when it later turns brown.. it reminds us of … well you get the picture…..
THE BLOB FISH
In March of 2011, Japan suffered one of the worst Tsunami events in modern history. The waves inundated one of the nuclear power plants there, spilling tons of radioactive waste into the ocean.
Just a few years later, pictures of strange looking fish began to appear on the internet… The posters claimed these photo were evidence of mutant fish created by radioactive sea water near the Japanese coast.
One of the more popular presentation of the mutant fish is this one… but is it really a mutant? Not really. It is called a blobfish and it’s actually a deep water fish that looks more like this when under the water. But because it has low density skin it just turns into an ugly looking blob of a creature outside the water.
In September 2013 the blobfish was voted the "World's Ugliest Animal", and adopted as the mascot of the Ugly Animal Preservation Society.
PLEASE SEND YOUR "REAL OR FAKE" questions to [email protected]
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