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.
bluemooone2
Vasa Croe
Tardacus
If it`s not a rock than it`s probably a part of one of the many mars explorers that crashed.
NASA isn`t the only ones that have sent explorers to mars,the russians sent a few but they all crashed I think NASA even sent one that crashed.
There isn`t much gravity up there so I think parts from crashed explorers could travel a long way before finally settling down on the martian surface.
My question on that note would be could "corrosion" have done that much damage over a fairly short period of time to a part that was made for space travel? It appears very corroded.
Mars has a mostly nitrogen atmosphere with no oxygen so that things on Mars would decay VERY slowly.
Whatever this is I think we can rule out anything that we left up there.
As for the size of the object , Richard says that it is about the size of an old fashioned telephone.edit on 26-9-2013 by bluemooone2 because: (no reason given)
Vasa Croe
I think for NASA to have taken the time to take a picture of this object lends credence to their thinking it was of significance. I don't really have a need for closure on it but would like to understand what it may be. I would think that if it were a piece of a downed prior mission then they would want to take a closer look too. I can't say I thought NASA expected to see this unless they already knew it was there somehow.
And no...I have not emailed NASA about it....
wrkn4livn
reply to post by Vasa Croe
Most likely this is a piece of the planet blown out of the ground and throw to its current location. Could have been from an asteroid impact and then thrown hundreds of miles to it current location.
Soylent Green Is People
Tardacus
reply to post by Vasa Croe
I think it would need oxygen to corrode, i`m thinking that maybe heat from the speed at which it was traveling could have made a mess of it like that.
you could try googling pictures of the various probes and explorers that crashed on mars and see if any of them have a part that resembles the object in the picture.
Rock does not require oxygen to corrode. There are many corrosive substances: sodium, sulfuric acid, various chlorides, salts, ammonia, hydrogen peroxide, and many others.
I'm not saying I think this is a case of corrosion -- I'm just pointing out the error in saying that oxygen is required for corrosion. That is not true.
Anyway...
As I said before, perhaps this is volcanic in nature, and it is a gas bubble that formed while the rock cooled.
Or maybe the rock was formed in a thermal "mudpot", and this was a bubble inside the mud that remained as the mud hardened into rock, and then later the rock broke to reveal half of the bubble.
edit on 9/26/2013 by Soylent Green Is People because: (no reason given)
Staroth
reply to post by Vasa Croe
Do you happen to have the NASA image link? If so can you please add it to your OP, I'd like to see this in full view and the source from which it came. Thanks.
Leonidas
A good rule of thumb to follow: If it comes from Hoagland, it is complete bulls**t.