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Is this a photo of the Moeraki Boulders? They are unusually large and spherical boulders lying along a stretch of Koekohe Beach on the wave-cut Otago coast of New Zealand. Therefore, this would prove that that area was at one time glacial and coastal. Sadly, there is only one example on Mars. Which begs the question," where did it come from and why is there only one?"
originally posted by: wildespace
originally posted by: Arken
How it was formed this absurd spherical anomaly?
Water erosion? A displaced concretion? Glacial erosion?
There is nothing absurd about spherical rocks. Why are you calling it an anomaly?
originally posted by: Arken
An amazing spherical anomaly right in front of the NASA rover called "Curiosity!" (What a strange name for a so indifferent machine...) on Sol 610. How it was formed this Bizarre Sphere? Wind erosion, Water erosion, both, or something else? How it was formed this absurd spherical anomaly? The unique feature of the Sphere, cast many questions. If you were the JPL "puppeteers" of the Rover, would not want to look more closely at such anomaly to understand its characteristics?
mars.jpl.nasa.gov...
mars.jpl.nasa.gov...
originally posted by: JohnTheSmith
I'll have to agree with your statement that Curiosity (or it's operators) seem quite indifferent to things we here on ATS would consider exciting, or anomalous.
you can estimate it's size, which in this case means it is at least a couple of meters across.....so instead of rock, we should be saying boulder now.
Hope this helped.
nice one arken.
but i am curious about the hut with the white interior or door behind it.
originally posted by: AntiNWO
Why are they taking my tax dollars just to go 4-wheeling?? I say let Arken drive for a while!
Arken:
The Sphere is two meters in diameter?
If Arken was driving, that rover wouldn't have travelled more than six feet by now - he'd still be probing every rock he saw in the first mastcam image
Why detour to look at rocks which look much the same as every other rock in the vicinity, and risk jeopardising the real chance of discovery? It is called "Curiosity", not "OCD".
Curiosity is driving towards Mount Sharp to hopefully discover interesting things in the sediment layers, things that will tell us what Mars was like when it had oceans, hopefully.
originally posted by: Arken
a reply to: tsingtao
nice one arken.
but i am curious about the hut with the white interior or door behind it.
Me too, tsingtao. I've noticed that.
But I'm quite interested in this HUT... that appear more like a VAULT in a cemetery...
(The Rover, in its indifference has passed very close, and ignored IT,... officially....)
originally posted by: wildespace
How much of Mars' surface have we explored using rovers? There might be thousands or tens of thousands of spherical rocks! Stop saying this one is unique.
originally posted by: Meee32
originally posted by: wildespace
How much of Mars' surface have we explored using rovers? There might be thousands or tens of thousands of spherical rocks! Stop saying this one is unique.
There MIGHT be, but as of yet they haven't been found, this is the first one so therefore noteworthy and so far an anomoly. It's not to say it is something supernatural... Just unusual