Aliens might be hiding on mysterious ‘Jurassic world’ as scientists reveal planet clue that will reveal their location

ALIEN life could actually resemble Earth's Jurassic days, scientists have suggested.
And new research posits that humans could detect such alien life by looking for compounds that are not found on Earth today, but once were when our dinosaurs roamed.
Around 300 million years ago, Earth had higher levels of oxygen than it does now.
Then, 30% of the atmosphere consisted of oxygen, which would have been sufficient for complex creatures like dinosaurs to grow.
Over time the oxygen level balanced out to 21%, where it has remained to this day.
Oxygen levels may be an important clue for spotting alien life on other planets, scientists have suggested in a new hypothesis.
The research was published in the journal on October 13.
The scientists noted that the elemental makeup of Earth today is what has been used when comparing other planets for signs of life.
"Modern Earth's light fingerprint has been our template for identifying potentially habitable planets, but there was a time when this fingerprint was even more pronounced — better at showing signs of life," study co-author Lisa Kaltenegger said in a .
"This gives us hope that it might be just a little bit easier to find signs of life — even large, complex life — elsewhere in the cosmos."
Most read in Tech
Special telescopes can detect levels of oxygen on other planets.
The new hypothesis will direct scientists to be more open about the various geological stages a planet can be in and the different life forms that come with that.
Scientists from the study suggest these life forms could even be "creatures as large and varied as the megalosaurus or micro-raptors that once roamed Earth."
When dinosaurs were on Earth, the planet was in an era called Phanerozoic.
"The Phanerozoic is just the most recent 12% or so of Earth's history, but it encompasses nearly all of the time in which life was more complex than microbes and sponges," Rebecca Payne, the study's lead author and a scientist at Cornell University, said in the statement.
"These light fingerprints are what you'd search for elsewhere if you were looking for something more advanced than a single-celled organism."
Scientists are hopeful there could be other somewhat bizarre forms of life on other planets.
"Hopefully we'll find some planets that happen to have more oxygen than Earth right now because that will make the search for life just a little bit easier," said Kaltenegger.
"And, who knows, maybe there are other dinosaurs waiting to be found."