Since the Curiosity Rover spacecraft landed in Gale Crater
on the planet Mars it has been sending back images that appear to show all
kinds of objects that simply should not be there. These include bones, planks
of wood, pyramids and statues. There are even objects that make some people
doubt that the Rover is even on Mars at all and might be driving round a remote
region of Earth, an island in the Canadian arctic is one place nominated, see: http://www.richplanet.net/starship_main.php?ref=193&part=1.
I find the idea of life on Mars perfectly plausible and I'm not just talking
microbes. There's evidence to suggest that Mars was once home to far more
advanced life-forms in the distant past. Structures have been photographed on
Mars that appear to be artificial, most famously the Face on Mars; this is just
one object of interest in an entire complex called Cydonia, see: http://hpanwo.blogspot.co.uk/2008/08/skeptics-in-pub-18808.html.
There are many others that have emerged since. This is not as nonsensical as
the Skeptics will tell you. It's been known since the first probes went to Mars
that the planet was not always as like as it is today; long ago water flowed on
its surface. There were rivers, lakes and even oceans. This means that back
then Mars must have had a denser atmosphere and it must have been an awful lot
warmer; very similar to what Earth like today. Could life have evolved on Mars
that was as complex as that on Earth? Maybe an intelligent animal species
emerged that was capable of building such structures as Cydonia. At some point
a terrible cataclysm befell the planet, about four billion years ago scientists
reckon, maybe the emergence of Olympus Mons and the enormous Tharsis volcanoes.
This killed off almost all the life and turned Mars into what it is today: dry,
airless and freezing cold. But the constructions remained and we can still see
them today. For whatever reason, the authorities are very keen to keep this a
secret from the general public.
Skeptics dismiss the sighting of recognizable objects on
Mars as what they call pareidolia,
the tendency we have to interpret random patterns as organized shapes; for
example we might see a map of Scotland in a passing cloud or a face in the wood
knots of a piece of timber. There are problems with this explanation, primarily
because it has no limitations. If we conclude that somebody is mistaken over
something they've seen because they're suffering from pareidolia, then it can
in theory be applied to everything they
see. It therefore is something of a get-out-of-jail-free card for the Skeptics,
see here for more detail: http://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.co.uk/2014/04/pan-pareidolia.html.
However the latest picture of interest from Curiosity must surely make some
Skeptics take a step back and pause. On the side of a cliff with sand dunes
beneath it there is a shallow grotto with smooth walls, and attached to one of
those walls is something that definitely looks out of place. It resembles a
spider or crustacean of some kind, perhaps a crab; it most definitely appears
to be a complex living organism. It clearly has eight appendages that could be
defined as legs. Its body looks like it has a shell. At the top are other
protrusions that might be sense organs of some kind, see: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3186416/What-images-dark-lady-crab-like-alien-facehugger-spotted-Mars-latest-bizarre-claims.html.
Could it be a mineral deposit or erosion feature? If so how did it form? The
rock it's a part of is made of neat horizontal layers. Do any geologists (or
areologists) have an answer to that? It looks distinctly like some kind of
animal crawling up the rock face. Some people say it's very similar to the
"facehugger" from the film series Alien.
If it's "just a coincidence!" that it looks like that and I'm now
suffering from pareidolia, then I repeat what I said about in the background
link. Where's the cut-off point? Where do we all agree is the statistical
ceiling above which you Skeptics cannot play the pareidolia joker?
See here for more
background: http://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.co.uk/2014/02/nasa-sued-over-mars-anomaly.html.
I think this came from thirdphase ben...so I don't want to commit yet
ReplyDeleteI think this came from thirdphase ben...so I don't want to commit yet
ReplyDeleteFair enough, Jason. I hope it's not a big hoax.
ReplyDeleteHi Ben,
ReplyDeleteThe image is no hoax. It's on the official NASA JPL website with the strange spider/crustacean still visible....
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl-raw-images/msss/00710/mcam/0710MR0030150070402501E01_DXXX.jpg
Might even be a cave painting similar to the aboriginal ones in Australia just a thought
ReplyDeleteMight even be a cave painting similar to the aboriginal ones in Australia just a thought
ReplyDeleteMight even be a cave painting similar to the aboriginal ones in Australia just a thought
ReplyDeleteThanks, Alan. I did wonder, and thought I should have checked myself after I'd written it
ReplyDeleteIt does look a bit like that, Vrillon.
ReplyDeletelooking at the nasa image from the link above ..... its a bit fuzzy man :) There are some compression artifacts in the image generally that are regions that appear a bit 'grill' like. This looks like the middle left set of 'legs' on the crab.
ReplyDeletealso if we look in the foreground we can see that it looks like large pieces of the cliff face have fallen off over time. They have the ridges at different angles to the general horizontal lines of the cliff face. But where the mystery form is appears to be a place where a large angular chunk has fallen away from the cliff face. It has left a sort of angular overhang and the crab is at the centre of that overhang. (is it a point of different rock that causes the break fault?)
The sides of the overhang look unweathered and smoother.
This might mean that forms like the crab were more common in the landscape for as long as they are not eroded away by whatever causes the horizontal ridges.
.... but an interesting image and i am open to nasa fraudulence.