From: Alintelbot@aol.com
Date: Wed Jul 21 1999 - 23:06:05 MDT
Mike wrote:
>We don't know for a fact if there are or are not non-human artifacts on
>Mars or not, but anyone with two eyes and at least a 120 IQ can plainly
>see that the landscape at Cydonia is NOT a non-human intelligently
>constructed artifact. Since most people who are not blind can see this,
>we should stop wasting our breath and money dealing with a few people
>who refuse to beleive their own eyes.
When I look at the angles in the so-called "City" complex, the proximity of
the "Face," the redundancy of the "Cliff" feature, which mirrors similar
features on the "Face" when viewed from the surface, the surreal cork-screw
effect of the "Tholus" to the direct bottom of the "Cliff," the identical
faceted compositions of the "Main Pyramid" and the "D&M Pyramid," apparent
buttressing, lack of impact damage (suggesting an origin more recent than the
craters in question), the fine detail evident in the "Face," the linear
arrays of knobs atop Hecates Tholus, the Cydonia Quadrangle, signs of
possible excacation, unidentified dark material emerging from a seeming
"crack" in the "D&M's" northern facet, etc., etc., I'm satisfied that there
is something most definitely worth looking into.
If this is an architecture, it wasn't built by us and it's very, very old.
It's interesting that you don't think it's prudent to "waste money" (a
myth--we've already got a craft there ready to take pictures without costing
anything) on taking a better look at structures "only a blind person sees,"
since some of the more intriguing archaeological finds right here on Earth
have been made by satellites that reveal structure the human eye can't make
out.
We're talking _at least_ thirty thousand years of Martian weathering. Of
course artificial structures on Mars aren't going to jump out like, say, a
picture of New York City from a few thousand feet. We can rightly expect the
confirming details to be subtle.
Carl Sagan noted that the presence of intelligence on Earth is revealed by
the _geometric_ aspect of its constructions. There are enough geometric
anomalies in the Cydonia region, and elsewhere on Mars, that seem to fulfill
this criteria. As such, they deserve close scrutiny and objectivity.
What were you expecting? The Chrysler building? Chrome and glass and
satellite dishes? Another point: if the formations on Mars are artificial,
they were probably built as self-contained structures; the enviroment on Mars
hasn't been too hospitable of late. So looking for urban sprawl and so forth
might be too anthrocentric an approach.
--Mac Tonnies
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