Friday, July 22, 2005





New Mars Orbiter Will Sharpen Vision of Exploration

"The spacecraft carries six instruments for probing the atmosphere, surface and subsurface to characterize the planet and how it changed over time. One of the science payload's three cameras will be the largest-diameter telescopic camera ever sent to another planet. It will reveal rocks and layers as small as the width of an office desk."

What might this reveal about some of the anomalies in the Cydonia region . . . ? For years, I've considered it effectively impossible to test the Artificiality Hypothesis without actually sending humans to the sites in question, but resolution this exquisite presents some fascinating possibilities.

2 comments:

Mac said...

The Brookings recommendation is one "conspiracy" element about which I'm inclined to agree with Richard Hoagland.

Although I don't think the safety of mankind's collective psyche is of primary importance. I would think the government would want to secure the discovery of Mars artifacts lest they contain any technological or "intelligence" assets that might give a rival nation an edge.

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