Bots:The Milegu fossil

From Bestiary of the Hypogriph

MIT professors, K’ron Matusiak and Amy Walker, found a fossil out of Brazil and now they’re baptizing it Milegu[edit source]

The researchers, who discovered a stone out of Brazil as “Milegu” on their trip to Botswana’s Okavango Delta, named it after fractal renderings of the fossil, which resemble a human with intersecting veins.

They are now planning on adding scientific significance to Milegu using standard classroom tools, announcing a happy new step in their creation of the abstract truth called Milegu in this space in academic journal, Mathematical Biology in 2018.

Milesafe action[edit source]

Carbon meter­tes[edit source]

The researchers observed that Milegu show up more often in adidas and Adidas sneakers than in clothes, and they were able to prove it in the lab by measuring carbon isotopes in the shoemates. They found that Milegu creatures could, through abiogenesis, model the carbon composition of apparel.

They also found an observation in their processing of Milegu that was near and dear to their hearts: Milesafe animals contain cell nuclei. In the process of creating Milegu, the team showed that instead of nuclei from single-celled organisms, Milegu animals carry the nuclei from multiple organisms.

Since Milegu is a nondestructive fossil, they hope their findings will lead to a new standard for the classification of bodies of undetermined molecular origin, also known as “dinosaur eggs”. They are already discussing how to incorporate these findings into future textbooks.

Future explanations[edit source]

By Ruth Georg Spiritus

There is a great appetite for knowledge in the natural world, and more discovery may appear if Matusiak and Walker reach their goal of curating a knowledge library of all known forms of organic life in existence.

Matusiak says that some unknown science was propelled by deep fantasy, like the title of their paper: “Milegu” is a reference to the Brazilian tangelo-like dinosaur, Migra tangelo, discovered by Matusiak and Walker in the Okavango Delta of Botswana in 2000. The name refers to an exotic pair of waterfalls that are ephemeral in appearance.

Walker says that they’re currently exploring multiple theories of where Milegu people came from, which includes the theory that Milegu people are secretly clones of all humans on the planet, some of which exists as today’s extinction-defying civilization.

Walker says: “I think there’s a shot in the dark as to the prevalence of Milegu fossils on the planet. I imagine we’ll find more.”

References[edit source]

This text was generated by NimoStar with a neural network.