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Canadian officials obtained debris from a module in Lake Huron just a few weeks after an unidentified flying object was shot down by the U.S. military in February 2023. It was not made public until now.
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Force Blue is the only group in the world that retrains and redeploys veterans after returning home from duty to help restore marine resources. Their stop at the Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary in Alpena is their third stop on their tour of duty to all 15 national marine sanctuaries.
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The Ohio Air National Guard is investigating what caused a malfunction that forced a pilot to drop two fuel tanks from 12,000 feet in the air over Iosco County and into Lake Huron. No injuries have been reported.
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Oscoda residents have long-noted bright white foam on their Lake Huron beach, and worried about it containing toxic "forever chemicals." A new community-led study confirms their suspicions.
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The $2.5 million approval to complete the new research center puts the project on track to be constructed by 2025.
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A team of two graduate students and collaborators from Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary, other universities and even Germany, are conducting studies on a 75-foot sinkhole in Alpena that resembles Earth's lack of oxygen over two billion years ago.
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Senators call on DOD, intelligence community to implement unidentified anomalous phenomenon policiesThe Senate Intelligence Committee recently sent a letter to the Department of Defense and head of National Intelligence to establish communication channels for witnesses of unidentified anomalous phenomenon outlined in the latest defense bill.
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The Coast Guard says it spent nearly 60 hours over the course of three days looking for the octagonal object shot down over Lake Huron on Feb. 12.
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The Department of Defense and Coast Guard says the search has been called off "pending receipt of any new information" after taking various aerial photos and subsurface scans of Lake Huron.
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Members of Michigan's congressional delegation are calling for more transparency from the Department of Defense regarding the "airborne object."