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originally posted by: shlaw
I usually wouldn't start a Mars anomaly thread as there are many
already, but this one is baffling scientists everywhere! (j/k).
Anyway, what gets me is how clean the bottom of the 'crater' is.
Weird.
article source
image source
... although, now that I'm reviewing it, I suppose the interior layer
could have settled afterward. Still cool imo.
originally posted by: Aliensun
a reply to: shlaw
I don't find this image as baffling as were the early images from the Mars orbiter that seemingly showed multiple, transparent tubes with curved support members. The tubes seemed to wind their way along subsurface valley areas. I believe that they were explained away by NASA.
Still, even if natural formations of some sort, because of their peculiarities, they would be of interest even today. I wonder why we don't see them anymore. Do you suppose....
originally posted by: wildespace
Mars is full of weird terrain: www.uahirise.org...
To me, this looks like a collapsed pit, probably originating from a pocket of CO2 underground.
Catalogue page for the image: hirise.lpl.arizona.edu...
Closeup of the crater/pit bottom with stretched contrast:
originally posted by: shlaw
originally posted by: Aliensun
a reply to: shlaw
I don't find this image as baffling as were the early images from the Mars orbiter that seemingly showed multiple, transparent tubes with curved support members. The tubes seemed to wind their way along subsurface valley areas. I believe that they were explained away by NASA.
Still, even if natural formations of some sort, because of their peculiarities, they would be of interest even today. I wonder why we don't see them anymore. Do you suppose....
I assume you mean these:
I wasn't happy with the explanation either, but I guess
I'll accept it for now (until we roll up in a rover and find
out otherwise).
NASA: apparent tubes are dunes inside crevasse/fissures.
(Note- there are better pics that do like like dunes. Ah well.)
How on earth (or on mars) can people confuse dune-filled troughs with "glass tubes"?
originally posted by: SeaWorthy
a reply to: wildespace
How on earth (or on mars) can people confuse dune-filled troughs with "glass tubes"?
Probably because of ice.
projectavalon.net.../page2
Except it's not ice. Those are sand dunes formed by wind.