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Originally posted by ArMaP
I decided to try my "anomaly hunting skills", and this is what I found in a relatively small area.
The reddish areas are the six areas in which I divided that bigger area, the blue areas are areas with strange lines or marks in it, the "targets" show the places where I found spirals (with two oval and one elliptical spiral). The coordinates are: 23°46'5.08"S 133°53'19.40"E
(click image for full size)
For those with Google Earth, I suggest the download of this "kmz" file with all those features.
Edit: This area includes the areas 2, 3 and 4 from the above post by zorgon.
[edit on 2/9/2009 by ArMaP]
Originally posted by Somamech
Here's a site totally run and owned by Aboriginals in Alice Springs with no reference whatsoever to these spirals:
Originally posted by Somamech you can obtain many fault free pieces of stone to facet
Originally posted by Somamech
The NW Spirals do indeed look much older. Its quite interesting that an Arid Zone Research Lab planted itself upon the main concentration of spirals... Now WHO are they protecting, Ancients or Technology ?
he desert plateau stretches an area of more than 966 km (600 miles), and is the perfect setting for scientists wishing to replicate experiments mimicking the environments of Mars. Layers upon layers of rock-hard sediment line the area, without any detectable signs of life. Even extremophiles - organisms known for surviving tough conditions such as thermal vents and hot springs - are nowhere to be found. It is these harsh conditions that create the perfect setting for scientists to link the similarities between these two closely related terrains, and conduct experiments that may reveal what happened to life on Mars.
Originally posted by ArMaP
Zorgon, do you have the Henbury meteorite craters in your "collection"?
Spiral designs may be formed from single, double, triple or quadruple swirls. Typically they are joined to one another in either an "S" or a "C" shape format. An example is the triskele (or triskelion), a three-pronged spiral also known as the "Spiral of Life". During the early Christian monastic art period, the triskele was employed to represent the Holy Trinity - God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.