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January 22, 2005
Just when you thought life couldn't possibly get any weirder ... http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...am/2005-01-22/ I admit I am having some trouble with the interpretation here, but notice the apparent giant tentacles, testicles, and the huge rock penis. I don't understand how these could be pillow lavas, but maybe they could be just collapsed, mud filled, water runoff tubes from within the former hill, as a purely geological interpretation.. Thomas Lee Elifritz http://elifritz.members.atlantic.net |
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Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote:
January 22, 2005 Just when you thought life couldn't possibly get any weirder ... http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...am/2005-01-22/ I admit I am having some trouble with the interpretation here, but notice the apparent giant tentacles, testicles, and the huge rock penis. I don't understand how these could be pillow lavas, but maybe they could be just collapsed, mud filled, water runoff tubes from within the former hill, as a purely geological interpretation.. Or maybe they are Spirit's tire tracks... -- Terrell Miller "Every gardener knows nature's random cruelty" -Paul Simon George Harrison |
#3
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January 22, 2005
Terrell Miller wrote: Or maybe they are Spirit's tire tracks... Actually, rover tire tracks are fairly easy to distinguish from native rocks. But, since that is the limit of your critical examination of the evidence, and your usenet commentary maturity ... plonk Thomas Lee Elifritz http://elifritz.members.atlantic.net |
#4
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In article ,
Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote: January 22, 2005 Just when you thought life couldn't possibly get any weirder ... http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...am/2005-01-22/ I admit I am having some trouble with the interpretation here, but notice the apparent giant tentacles, testicles, and the huge rock penis. Did you see the pocket comb? Clear proof that Martian life had hair. -- David Canzi |
#5
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... January 22, 2005 Terrell Miller wrote: Or maybe they are Spirit's tire tracks... Actually, rover tire tracks are fairly easy to distinguish from native rocks. But, since that is the limit of your critical examination of the evidence, and your usenet commentary maturity ... plonk Actually I thought he was referring to the supposed monster fossils. They look much more like tyre tracks to me too. Can see anything else in the images that could possibly be interpreted as fossils of any kind, or pillow lavas for that matter. Plonk yourself. cheers Bill. |
#6
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"Landy" wrote in message
... Actually I thought he was referring to the supposed monster fossils. They look much more like tyre tracks to me too. Can see anything else in the images that could possibly be interpreted as fossils of any kind, or pillow lavas for that matter. All you have to do is wait a few million years, and these tracks could amaze future archeologists who may wonder at what kind of beast made these marks. ![]() regards, Dar7yl |
#7
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you are very entertaining... in small doses.
Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote: January 22, 2005 Just when you thought life couldn't possibly get any weirder ... http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...am/2005-01-22/ I admit I am having some trouble with the interpretation here, but notice the apparent giant tentacles, testicles, and the huge rock penis. I don't understand how these could be pillow lavas, but maybe they could be just collapsed, mud filled, water runoff tubes from within the former hill, as a purely geological interpretation.. Thomas Lee Elifritz http://elifritz.members.atlantic.net |
#8
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I admit I am having some trouble with the interpretation here, but
notice the apparent giant tentacles, testicles, and the huge rock penis. Why is there a hentai monster on Mars? In any case, Mars rover photos seem like a 21st century variant of the Rorschach inkblot test. |
#9
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January 23, 2005
Landy wrote: wrote in message oups.com... January 22, 2005 Terrell Miller wrote: Or maybe they are Spirit's tire tracks... Actually I thought he was referring to the supposed monster fossils. They look much more like tyre tracks to me too. Can see anything else in the images that could possibly be interpreted as fossils of any kind, or pillow lavas for that matter. You idiots are such slackers. http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...PP2357R1M1.JPG Numerous examples of flanging, curling, rimming, lipping, extrusion, etc. and not a single rover track. http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...PP2357R1M1.JPG Notice the hollow dark rock, and more folding. http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...PP2357R1M1.JPG Here is obvious folding and curling of mat like material. Not a single rover track in any of there images. You just scan the first image and then make your decision with no analysis at all, I am so impressed with your rigor and precision. I am having a real hard time ascribing any of this to ordinary basaltic volcanism, lacking any real substantive spectroscopy from Squeers and his band of clowns. These rocks are dehydroxylating in place in a manner very similar to Meridiani, and there are obvious signs of water outflow everywhere. If it's volcanism at all, it would have to be mud volcanism. Thomas Lee Elifritz http://elifritz.members.atlantic.net |
#10
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![]() "Thomas Lee Elifritz" wrote in message ... January 23, 2005 Landy wrote: wrote in message oups.com... January 22, 2005 Terrell Miller wrote: Or maybe they are Spirit's tire tracks... Actually I thought he was referring to the supposed monster fossils. They look much more like tyre tracks to me too. Can see anything else in the images that could possibly be interpreted as fossils of any kind, or pillow lavas for that matter. You idiots are such slackers. http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...PP2357R1M1.JPG Numerous examples of flanging, curling, rimming, lipping, extrusion, etc. and not a single rover track. http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...PP2357R1M1.JPG Notice the hollow dark rock, and more folding. http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spi...PP2357R1M1.JPG Here is obvious folding and curling of mat like material. Not a single rover track in any of there images. You just scan the first image and then make your decision with no analysis at all, I am so impressed with your rigor and precision. I am having a real hard time ascribing any of this to ordinary basaltic volcanism, lacking any real substantive spectroscopy from Squeers and his band of clowns. These rocks are dehydroxylating in place in a manner very similar to Meridiani, and there are obvious signs of water outflow everywhere. If it's volcanism at all, it would have to be mud volcanism. Where do you get your drugs? Are they cheap? cheers Bill |
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