Such faces made headlines again near the end of 2006, when Mars Express, an orbiter from the European Space Agency, captured the highest-quality three-dimensional images to date of what looks like a face in the Cydonia region of Mars. The photos reignited conspiracy theories that governments on Earth are trying to hide the existence of intelligent life on Mars.
(Via The Anomalist.)
Count on the New York Times to regurgitate the Face on Mars "conspiracy theory" meme.
The three-dimensional image in question is, of course, the one that shows a perfectly nonexistent "horn" between the eyes. Noting that the horn doesn't conform to the same data used to derive two other Mars Express Face images is simple observation, not a wild-eyed "theory."
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3 comments:
I like the attribute "skull"
Brent--
The feature the ESA is calling a "skull" *isn't* the Face. I think they're trying to confuse the issue with that image.
My screen's a little dusty, so I read the header as "Feces, Feces, Everywhere" -- which alas, says much about some of the talk about the Face we've encountered over the years.
Brent, if you take a closer look, that feature recently labeled as a "skull" only gives a fleeting resemblence to a skull. The depressions are actually quite wrong for a skull.
Context is also important. That feature was discussed as far back as 1998, but no mention of a resemblence to a skull was ever uttered back then. That's because the image we saw at the time, one taken from overhead, showed no resemblence to a face or skull whatsoever.
One of the criteria often suggested for determining whether a geological feature might be a huge sculpture, would be that it
appears to be appropriate for its subject matter if seen from several angles. Think about those "Old Man of the Mountain" crags which usually only show that way in profile, compared to the sculptures at Mt. Rushmore.
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