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#2
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![]() Ray Vingnutte wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4157689.stm Obviously the seam were the two halves of this "fake" moon screw together. I wonder who is living inside? Double-A |
#3
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On 10 Jan 2005 20:39:26 -0800
"Double-A" wrote: Ray Vingnutte wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4157689.stm Obviously the seam were the two halves of this "fake" moon screw together. It looks like it doesn't it, or sewn together with a whopping needle and thread ;-) I wonder who is living inside? Some little old lady knitting away I expect with a cat on her lap. Double-A |
#4
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![]() Ray Vingnutte wrote: On 10 Jan 2005 20:39:26 -0800 "Double-A" wrote: Ray Vingnutte wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4157689.stm Obviously the seam were the two halves of this "fake" moon screw together. It looks like it doesn't it, or sewn together with a whopping needle and thread ;-) Or perhaps riveted together. Notice one hemisphere is lighter colored than the other too, as though constructed at a different location out of slightly different locally available material. I wonder who is living inside? Some little old lady knitting away I expect with a cat on her lap. Double-A Or maybe it is the disguised battlestar from which Darla and crew are hailing! Perhaps the darker side moves forward on their interstellar journeys, becoming more tarnished from micrometeorites and virtual cosmic rays. Double-A P.S. Maybe Bert is right after all. The ultimate ship is spherical! |
#5
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nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote: Ray Vingnutte wrote: On 10 Jan 2005 20:39:26 -0800 "Double-A" wrote: Ray Vingnutte wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4157689.stm Obviously the seam were the two halves of this "fake" moon screw together. It looks like it doesn't it, or sewn together with a whopping needle and thread ;-) Or perhaps riveted together. Notice one hemisphere is lighter colored than the other too, as though constructed at a different location out of slightly different locally available material. I wonder who is living inside? Some little old lady knitting away I expect with a cat on her lap. Double-A Or maybe it is the disguised battlestar from which Darla and crew are hailing! Perhaps the darker side moves forward on their interstellar journeys, becoming more tarnished from micrometeorites and virtual cosmic rays. Double-A P.S. Maybe Bert is right after all. The ultimate ship is spherical! nightbat Ok, ok, so perhaps we did finally find Dr.Strangebones laboratory, for he did say Darla sometimes leaves behind a skeleton crew to watch over us. And that Lapetus bizarre split rim moon looks like a good candidate all right. Excellent work Officer Ray, I knew I could count on you to find our mystery secret potential Darla moon base. Let's ask Mr. Bohne for some further possible link input on this new data if he has any. Hmmmmm, could prove very interesting if we have finally located Bert indicating Darla's spherical like fake moon satellite. And yes Officer Double-A, your preliminary evaluation or theory of potential battle star disguised as a moon and at times moving and accumulating darker matter and impacts on its long interstellar travels is very plausible. This perhaps explains as well the need for Darla's occasional comm. silence to try not to alert Nasa human observing multi sensors on the Cassini mission fly-by. There could be so many other physical reasons for that compression moon ridge but the one presented makes just as much sense as any other right now. Carry on, the nightbat |
#6
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![]() "Ray Vingnutte" wrote in message ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4157689.stm Obviously God is a seam bowler.... Best Wishes |
#7
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![]() There's more better quality pics of Lapetus here http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/index.cfm |
#8
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![]() Ray Vingnutte wrote: There's more better quality pics of Lapetus here http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/index.cfm Ah yes, Lapetus has those weird huge craters too! Perhaps ancient battle scars from direct hits by powerful alien weapons? Double-A |
#9
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On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 03:02:05 +0000, Ray Vingnutte
wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4157689.stm "I"apetus not Lapetus. you were making me nervous that it had been renamed overnite.... |
#10
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On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 14:37:32 GMT
beavith wrote: On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 03:02:05 +0000, Ray Vingnutte wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4157689.stm "I"apetus not Lapetus. you were making me nervous that it had been renamed overnite.... The number of times I have seen that name of late I could have sworn that was an 'L'. Thanks. Time for a new pair of glasses me thinks. |
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