Mysterious slime amongst strange things studied by UK's new X-Files

Blackleaf

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London's Natural History Museum has set up its own X-Files unit to investigate bizarre phemonema.

The Identification and Advisory Service has been tasked with identifying a host of bizarre items discovered by the British public.

Amongst those is a mysterious slime, which has left the investigators stumped.

The strange gloop, found at the Ham Wall nature reserve in Somerset, mysteriously appeared around the same time as a meteor crashed to earth in Chelyabinsk, Russia, in February and an amateur photographer claimed he had captured a mysterious object whizzing through the sky above the park on camera.

Laboratory tests have so far failed to find just what it could be - and where it had come from.

Amongst the other items being studied by the Idenitification and Advisory Service are a rock which looks like a dinosaur skull and an alien in a jar.

The Natural History Museum is home to 70 million specimens of flora and fauna, ranging from microscopic slides to mammoth skeletons, the largest and most important natural history collection in the world.


The British X-Files: Natural History Museum sets up unit to investigate bizarre phenomenon - but is baffled by Somerset's mysterious 'space slime'


Strange substance found in nature reserve thought to be linked to meteor
Jelly investigated at museum's Angela Marmont Centre for UK Biodiversity
Experts tasked with identifying unexplained items including 'dragon skulls'

By Lucy Crossley
21 October 2013
Daily Mail



A unit of museum experts tasked with investigating unexplained phenomenon have been left baffled by a mysterious substance, dubbed 'space slime'.

Carrying out work which would leave even The X-Files's Fox Mulder and Dana Scully stumped, the team at the Natural History Museum have been tasked with identifying a host of bizarre items discovered by the British public.

Among the finds examined by the museum's Identification and Advisory Service was a mysterious slime discovered in a peaceful nature reserve in Somerset.


Mysterious: The origins of the 'space slime', discovered at a nature reserve in Somerset is being investigated by experts at the Natural History Museum's Identification and Advisory Service, established to probe unexplained objects. A 50p coin has been placed next to the slime for a sense of scale


Secrets of the universe: The strange gloop, found at the Ham Wall nature reserve, mysteriously appeared around the same time as a meteor crashed to earth in Chelyabinsk, Russia

The strange gloop, found at the Ham Wall nature reserve, mysteriously appeared around the same time as a meteor crashed to earth in Chelyabinsk, Russia, and an amateur photographer claimed he had captured a mysterious object whizzing through the sky above the park on camera.

The object appeared to be a meteor, although this was not confirmed by astronomers.

Nature buffs claimed the slime was merely frogspawn, while others said it was 'star jelly', a strange substance said to appear when meteors fall to earth, which has continued to stump scientists.

The London museum's Angela Marmont Centre for UK Biodiversity, which houses the Identification and Advisory Service, was tasked with investigating the mysterious slime, with the aim of establishing whether it had fallen from space, or if its origins were rather more terrestrial.

Laboratory tests have so far failed to find just what it could be - and where it had come from.


Discovery: The Natural History Museum's Angela Marmont Centre for UK Biodiversity is tasked with identifying unknown objects, such as this rock which a member of the public mistook for a dinosaur skull


Agent Skull-y: The pelvis bones of sea birds, such as auks and puffins, were thought by their imaginative discoverers to be dragon skulls


The tooth is out there: A deer skull was mistaken for that on an ice-age sabre tooth cat because of its long tusks

Scientists from the unit extracted DNA from the jelly and tried to match it against that of birds and frogs, without success.

DNA traces of worms and bacteria were found in the substance, but these were not thought to have been the source of the slime, and had more likely come from organisms which colonised the matter.

Chesca Rogers, from the AMC, has been working on the mysterious substance since it was sent to
the unit by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, which runs the nature reserve where it was found in February.

'The slime is still a genuine mystery,' Ms Rogers told The Daily Telegraph.

'There are stories in folklore that link it with meteor sightings. Some people think it might be unfertilised frog spawn, others think it is a fungus, or a slime mould or that it is plant related.

'None of the tests we have done so far have told us anything conclusive, but the samples we got were not in the best condition and highly contaminated.'

Ms Rogers is set to open up her very own X-Files this Friday at a museum talk where she will explain how she has been unravelling the mystery, as well as other examples of the AMC's most intriguing and puzzling cases.

The Natural History Museum in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, west London, is home to 70 million specimens of flora and fauna, ranging from microscopic slides to mammoth skeletons, the largest and most important natural history collection in the world.


Mystery: The origins of the 'space slime' might even have left Mulder and Scully from cult television programme The X-Files stumped

The doors at the AMC, housed inside the museum's Darwin Centre are open daily so that people who find strange objects, including fossils, can get help with identifying them.

However, some of the mysteries of finds brought to the AMC by eagle-eyed members of the public have proved easier to solve.

The haul has included stones they believe to be the remains of a dinosaur and 'meteorites' that are in fact discarded aluminium foil.

A skull believed to have belonged to an ice-age sabre tooth cat, its fur still intact, was instead found to be that of a Chinese Water Deer, thought to have been mistaken for the ancient predator because of its long tusks which could have been mistaken for powerful teeth.

Other animal remains have been mistaken for something even more incredible, such as the pelvis bones of sea birds, such as auks and puffins, which were thought by their imaginative discoverers to be dragon skulls.

In one case, which initially appeared to be one for agents Mulder and Scully, an 'alien' in a jar of liquid was brought in, only to be revealed as a science fiction toy.

THE NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM

What's in the collections?

The Museum's vast collections comprise specimens from across the natural world, including items from the voyages of discovery by Darwin and Cook, material from the ill-fated dodo and meteorites from Mars. They cover virtually all groups of animals, plants, minerals and fossils, and include skins, cells on slides and whole animals preserved in alcohol.

In total there are…


  • 61 million animals, including 32 million insects
  • 9 million fossils, including one of only ten specimens of Archaeopteryx - the earliest known flying bird
  • 6 million lichen and plant specimens including algae, diatoms, ferns, mosses and seed plants
  • more than 500,000 rocks and minerals
  • 5,000 meteorites


The Museum also houses the world's finest natural history library. It is the largest collection of natural history library materials in the world and includes…



  • more than 750,000 printed books
  • 25,000 periodical titles
  • 350,000 original drawings, paintings and prints. This is the third largest collection of art in the UK!
  • 10,000 manuscripts
  • 75,000 maps


 
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Locutus

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Seriously man, the fuk is wrong with your animals over there?

 

Blackleaf

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Seriously man, the fuk is wrong with your animals over there?


It's an immigrant to Britain.

The Chinese water deer comes from China and Korea, but now it's as British as the Queen playing cricket on a red London double decker bus with a Spitfire emblazoned on the side of it as it goes past a red telephone box, with a man inside it drinking a cup of tea, past St Paul's Cathedral just before running over an umbrella-carrying Beefeater on his way to buy some fish and chips after watching Coronation Street on a rainy evening in the Tower of London just after England have lost on penalties against Germany in the Quarter Final of the World Cup.

Chinese water deer were first introduced into Great Britain in the 1870s. The animals were kept in the London Zoo until 1896, when Herbrand Russell oversaw their transferral to Woburn Abbey, Bedfordshire. More of the animals were imported and added to the herd over the next three decades. In 1929 and 1930, 32 deer were transferred from Woburn to Whipsnade, also in Bedfordshire, and released into the park. The current population of Chinese water deer at Whipsnade is currently estimated to be more than 600, while the population at Woburn is probably in excess of 250.

The majority of the current population of Chinese water deer in Britain derives from escapees, with the remainder being descended from a number of deliberate releases. Most of these animals still reside close to Woburn Abbey. It appears that the deer’s strong preference for a particular habitat – tall reed and grass areas in rich alluvial deltas - has restricted its potential to colonize further afield. The main area of distribution is from Woburn, east into Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, Suffolk and North Essex, and south towards Whipsnade. There have been small colonies reported in other areas

The British Deer Society coordinated a survey of wild deer in the United Kingdom between 2005 and 2007 and noted the Chinese water deer as "notably increasing its range" since the last census in 2000.

Water deer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia