There have been a number of plausible cases of preserved bodies of dead female aliens who are about 39 inches tall, and appear to have been adult females at the time of their deaths. a nineteenth century case dealt with the finding of two of these Lady Exploratrices, as one might style in a cave-like environment in South America, they were inside a hollowed-out rock cairn, of sorts. They had some kind of helmet with siphon device on ( possibly some form of life-support mask) and were first thought to be some sort of animals- when the helmets were removed they were clearly female humanoids. a number of cases have come up with this type of Female Aliens- there is or was a so-called Cueva de Santa Juana ( cave of St. Joan) in Mexico- the body was found resting on what was probably a heat shield. she was intact, and was holding a miniscule Bowie-knife like weapon with other-worldly markings. Her space suit suggested medieval armor- hence the name applied to the Cave. I have heard of several such cases but none have been officially confirmed.
how would finn look like in real life
In real life, no space aliens are known and proven to exist.
what dose finn look like
In halo yes in real life no
No aliens are, in real life, known to exist, let alone attack.
There are no such things as aliens, come on have you honestly seen one in real life ?
Well, aliens are real. If you look at the real definition, it is someone who comes from somewhere else, also called foreigners. Aliens from outer space are also real. They may not be intelligent yet, but there are bacteria out there. those are microscopic aliens. So the short answer is yes.
They'd look similar to their real-life counter-parts.
What does Ashley Greene from Twilight look like in real life
No there is no life forms on planet Boot
it is possible that aliens are real because space in huge they has to be life some where just people are scared to go and see
There are no aliens known to exist, in real life. Sorry. Someone has to be the first form of intelligent life in the universe, and it might well be us.