It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by rdunk
reply to post by ArMaP
........................................................................................................
Hey ArMaP, I am really glad that you found this anomaly in a different photo. Thanks a lot, and I have added it to my files. I did read the narrative, about it being a "crater", but then, with the current party line, how could we expect it to be any different. Their jobs would certainly depend upon their getting it said just right.
This anomaly certainly doesn't look like any crater that I have ever seen, on Mars, and it doesn't look like a crater, IMO.
I will post another screenshot, for the new pic, and a direct link to the full HIRSE photo. The photo itsself is pretty much the same, as posted in the OP.
Again ArMaP, I really appreciate your help!
themis-data.asu.edu...
edit on 1-12-2011 by rdunk because: Added another comment
Originally posted by wmd_2008
So NOW you claim to know what every impact crater should look like thats a big claim no I will correct that it's an UNBELIEVABLE claim.
It has all the hallmarks of being an impact! DO you know the exact composition of the surface material or how the event occured or what impacted NO!
I mean whats your KNOWLEDGE on the subject or imaging! some people on here will have be working with or looking at images I will hazard a guess longer than you have been alive!edit on 2-12-2011 by wmd_2008 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by AlphaExray
reply to post by rdunk
Looks natural, don't give up. Meet the towers.
25 55 55 55 S
48 48 48 48 W
AX
FTNWO
But it does to me, a crater made by an object that hit the ground at a small angle (not vertically), so the crater's rim is higher on one side than on the other. As its covered with ice it doesn't get eroded in the same way as the other craters on warmer latitudes.
Originally posted by rdunk
Well ArMaP, ............., it does not look like a crater to me, (and some others)
It's the ground, probably because of it being irregular, those darker stripes are not covered with ice.
And please tell me just what the "dark/hairy thatchy is, if it is not computer/personnel "applied"???????
No, I don't think those are rocks.
As I have said before, it is not rocks!
It could be dark sand.
It is not sand! It is not snow!
I don't think it's volcanic flow.
It is not volcanic flow!
Just because NASA says something that doesn't mean that it's automatically true, so I wouldn't use an expression like that, although I agree that it doesn't look like a living organism.
And it cannot be anything that is "alive", because NASA says there is nothing alive on Mars.
It's the ground, not completely covered by ice/snow, like in this image.
So..............what is it?????
No problem.
Originally posted by rdunk
Well ArMaP, we will just pleasantly agree to differ.
I can't, I see the ice/snow above the dark stuff, not under, and I have seen it in hundreds of photos from the poles.
If you will look around that area a little, you will see "ice/snow" on the ground. And, fairly near the anomaly, you can also see the white of the ice/snow under this hairy/dark thatchy stuff.
Originally posted by ArMaP
No problem.
Originally posted by rdunk
Well ArMaP, we will just pleasantly agree to differ.
If you will look around that area a little, you will see "ice/snow" on the ground. And, fairly near the anomaly, you can also see the white of the ice/snow under this hairy/dark thatchy stuff.
I can't, I see the ice/snow above the dark stuff, not under, and I have seen it in hundreds of photos from the poles.