Alien hunters claim they've spotted UFOs in Nasa's Apollo 9 images

If you ever find yourself casually staring up at the moon and wondering if we’re alone in the universe – you’re not alone.

Prominent alien hunter Scott C. Waring is well-known for tirelessly scouring old photos and videos in the hope of discovering the truth. Waring’s latest find lies in old images from Nasa’s Apollo 9 mission back in the 1960s.

Blasting off from Florida in March 1969, Apollo 9 saw three astronauts orbit the Earth for ten days as a test leading up to the iconic Apollo 11 mission later that year. During their time in orbit, the astronauts captured a particular image of the moon that has caught Waring’s attention.

It shows dark marks in front of the moon that Waring believes could be evidence of alien spacecraft.

Waring says the UFOs are up to three kilometres long and very thin.

‘UFOs that were over 2-3 km long have been seen and reported by pilots and other eyewitnesses, I myself have reported UFOs in NASA photos on the moons surface that were about 10km across in comparison with the nearby crater who’s diameter is known,’ Waring wrote on his blog.

‘Here again are three UFOs, long and giant in size flying past the moon and recorded by none other than NASA! Its a glitch, a scratch, a cheap lens on your scope…sorry boys, NASA buys only the best quality and highest performance parts for its observations, but thank you for playing.’

Whether or not aliens have visited the moon isn’t stopping Nasa from developing ambitious plans to colonise the lunar surface.

The US space agency has set out plans to return to the moon by 2024 and wants to build ‘Artemis Base Camp’ to allow humans to live on the desolate surface. The habitat could potentially be located in the Shackleton Crater on the moon’s south pole and would allow for up to four astronauts to live there for a week.

As well as the main base, Nasa could also house two vehicles on the moon that astronauts would use to get around. The first would be used for astronauts to move themselves around the base but the second is described as a habitable mobility platform. That would be pressurised and allow astronauts to make longer trips out across the moon’s surface.

The base and the vehicles are outlined in a 13-page report from Nasa called the ‘Plan for Sustained Lunar Exploration and Development’ and explains that Artemis astronauts could use the moon base as a staging post for an eventual mission to Mars.

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