Redpaw
Mar 24 2004, 08:19 PM
I was surfing through the Mars uploaded pictures and I came across the newer Images that were taken from the satellitte currently orbiting Mars, I saw this and not even NASA or JPL has an explanation.
Wind would not make it round, Water would have eroded the crater and the sphere also.....
I'm thinking it has to be a Crytalline Structure or Metallic Ore....Pyrite nuggets are hexadecimal & Octahedral shaped so what is this?
Original Image found here:
USGS Mars Anomaly
Coalbunny
Mar 24 2004, 09:53 PM
Too many details that you left out. What is the angle of the pic? What is the approximate size of the target? What is the distance from the camera to the target?
Without those everything is speculation.
Carl
gold_tutor
Mar 24 2004, 10:16 PM
Redpaw
Mar 24 2004, 11:55 PM
A width of 38 pixels at 4.47m per pixel yields a diameter of 169.86 meters or 557.28 feet! The magnitude of scale becomes apparent for those of you who have visited the dome at Walt Disney World's Epcot Center which spans a mere 265 feet in diameter!
gold_tutor
Mar 25 2004, 10:37 PM
Gotta say, Redpaw, I enlarged it and it STILL looks like Tiger Woods' lost golfball... B)
Redpaw
Mar 25 2004, 10:47 PM
baffled......
man I just want to know......
something that big strinking a planet would have created a much bigger crater than what it is sitting in.....did it strike elsewhere and roll off and into this divot?
Titanium?..... If it was metallic I would think it would shine a little more like the heatshield did at the Bonneville Crater on mars from the initial pictures released from Spirit Rover....unless it was covered in a thin layer of dust.
and those mostly uniform divots upon it surface aren't any help.....
I figured Gold Tutor would have said..."No, Dave that's just a blah blah blah and your being fooled by the reflection and refraction of the light"
Sammy316
Mar 25 2004, 10:51 PM
Looks like a nose to me.
Coalbunny
Mar 26 2004, 07:43 AM
Redpaw, I am not joking when I say that this is quite possibly an artificially-constructed structure. Look at the size, look at the external design, look at the shape. The design, using tetrahedrons as this appeasrs to use, is renowned for excelling at stress management. The shape, the same thing- the circle is the most stable shape known.
I'm not joking Redpaw. Sounds far fetched? Perhaps. But how realis that pic? My theory is just as real as the pic you provided. Is it really an artificial structure? Guess we'll soon find out. Maybe it's not.
Carl
TWA
Mar 26 2004, 08:20 AM
For what its worth by looking at the craters edge, it looks as if when this thing hit the surface may have been muddy.
The lower edge of this crater seems to have held up.
As when this object hit it would have also generated heat therefore drying out the mud and retaing shape.
But then again this is only my thoughts.
TWA
sgaolson
Mar 26 2004, 09:11 AM
Your going to need a sand wedgr to get out of there......
Tutor I'm with you. I've been in enough traps at enough golf courses to know what one looks like.
:(
Denise
Mar 26 2004, 12:28 PM
Garry and Megan are on the right track. :D
But I think its something
much bigger! :o
Here is a link to some examples of what Dan and I think it is...........
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/publications/slide...ter_index.shtmlWhat do you think? ;) :)
Johnny
Mar 26 2004, 03:20 PM
Howdy All,
Geeze this is a tough one.... perhaps Archangle Gabriel is practicing with new bismuth shot in his shotgun... more ecologically correct... but doesn't carry as well as the old standard iron metorites.
Happy Trails,
Johnny
sgaolson
Mar 26 2004, 03:29 PM
Denise, is that from when one of the Apollo guys used a 9 iron on the moon?
El Dorado
Apr 26 2004, 08:26 PM
Certainly looks like an intelligent made structure with a windbreak around it and a cupola tyoe entrance????.
coargonaut
May 6 2004, 08:42 PM
The Rocket Scientist Checks IN....
Looks like a view down from the bridge over the Tijuana River, after the wind blew my new sombrero off....
Ed
jmann
May 6 2004, 09:01 PM
I think Sammy's right. Looks more and more like a schnaws wit that rino stuff :P :P :P jmann
Si_NM
Jun 2 2004, 10:21 AM
The answer might be simpler than you think. Have you ever seen a slow motion video of a drop of milk hitting a dish of milk? First you get a crater in the pool of milk. Then comes some ejecta around the perimeter of the crater. Lastly from the center of the crater rises a vertical column of milk as a small rebound effect happens. Translated to the rock of the planet and an incoming meteoric imapct, the structure inside the crater is likely a truncated rebound mound. The milk soon returns to being a flat surface being a liquid,, but the rock freezes in shape, retaining the crater and rebound mound, Whether a rebound mound forms at all and remains is likely tied to the rock dynamics of the underlying strata.
.
This stuff is fun,, Si_NM
russau
Jun 2 2004, 05:07 PM
does anyone have the urge to eat some cookies now??haha
Coalbunny
Jun 2 2004, 06:18 PM
Si, with all them fancy terms, you make it sound like a woman giving birth.....<shivers> :o
Carl
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