A UFO expert claimed to have spotted clusters of alien fungus structures on the dark side of the Moon. The expert noted that he saw the images of the structures while browsing a book that features photos taken by a NASA lunar mission.

The latest claims regarding the existence of alien structures on the Moon were made by Scott Waring of the UFO-focused blog ET Data Base. According to Waring, the strange structures were photographed by NASA and featured in the book “Lunar Orbiter Photographic Atlas” by Charles Byrne.

As indicated in the book’s description, it features the photos taken by the Lunar Orbiter 4 mission. This was a robotic spacecraft launched by NASA in 1967. It was part of the Lunar Orbiter Program, which orbited the Moon and mapped out its surface in preparation for the Apollo missions.

In the photos shared by Waring through a blog post and a YouTube video, strange white dots can be seen across the images. Waring noted that these dots, which are clustered together, are actually alien structures on the lunar surface. Waring referred to the objects as fungus structures mainly because of their appearance.

Due to their appearance, one could probably say that the white dots were caused by an issue when the photo was being processed. However, Waring ruled out this explanation due to the shadows that appear to have been made by the structures.

“The objects are not glitches in the photo process as some would say,” he wrote in a blog post. “They actually have shadows thrown a long ways. The photo above is actually a hill-like structure that turns into this fungus structure.”

In addition to their strange appearance, Waring also noticed that the clusters were built in a way that followed the topography of the lunar surface. For instance, one of the clusters that he saw were built around the edge of a small hill on the Moon.

Waring speculated that the fungus-like appearance of the clusters could mean that the structures are bio-mechanical, which means they were grown by alien beings instead of being constructed.

Moon's Water Ice
Conceptual illustration of permanently shadowed, shallow icy craters near the lunar south pole. NASA/UCLA