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"A stunning survey of the latest evidence for intelligent life on Mars. Mac Tonnies brings a thoughtful, balanced and highly accessible approach to one of the most fascinating enigmas of our time."
--Herbie Brennan, author of Martian Genesis and The Atlantis Enigma
"Tonnies drops all predetermined opinions about Mars, and asks us to do the same."
--Greg Bishop, author of Project Beta
"I highly recommend the book for anyone interested in the search for extra-terrestrial artifacts, and the political intrigues that invariably accompany it."
--David Jinks, author of The Monkey and the Tetrahredron
"Mac Tonnies goes where NASA fears to tread and he goes first class."
--Peter Gersten, former Director of Citizens Against UFO Secrecy
And don't miss...
(Includes my essay "The Ancients Are Watching.")
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9 comments:
Assuming that Darwinists are correct, vegetative life on Earth evolved through natural selection. It's hard to believe that virtually identical life forms just happened to have evolved on Mars too.
These look so uncannily like the fungal cultures we grew in university that I just can't believe that they're entirely geological. My mind remains open, but they really look like something distributing itself via spore.
My question is why don't we have better, more definitive imagery of these peculiar areas?
And why, if this is near the south pole, our next probe, to test for water and life, is being sent to the edge of the north pole, where it will remain stationary, and nothing like this appears where the probe will land. Seems odd.
>>"It's hard to believe that virtually identical life forms just happened to have evolved on Mars too."<<
There are two problems with your argument. First: form follows function, which is why we have organisms with completely different ancestory looking very similar when they adapt themselves to similar environments or lifestyles. Second it is not beyond possibility that Mars seeded Earth or Earth seeded Mars with DNA based organisms.
The link seems to be no longer accessible. What is going on?
Whitley Strieber posted a link to this site from his email newsletter; looks like it's exceeded its allotted bandwidth. Check back later.
This is not vegetation. Recently hi-res photos were taken of the area Here is a progression of Hi res photos from the new orbiting camera of what has been dubbed the Arthur C Clarke Banyan Treesbr>
Stan
Stan--
Many thanks for the link! I hadn't seen these. You're right -- it looks like we're seeing geology after all.
It is however very interesting geology. It looks like streams of water.
Stan
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