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Thomas Billings wrote:
If so, how might the people be trained, assuming this were done via Internet? Perhaps work up a quiz/tutorial of images (some suspected by experts of showing signs of lava tubes and some not) and only select the highest scoring individuals? Or better yet, let anyone play but, when later forming a consensus/score for a given Clementine image, weight that person's choices by their score on the quiz? Unless someone out there has done more than the minimal amount of eyeball work we did with the pictures in finding terrain features, this last idea seems a bit more hopefull to me. I would recommend starting at : http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/clementine.html There is a browser for the images, as well as much Clementine information in links and pages. Has anyone taken the shots of known rilles and what appeared to be collapsed tubes to find out if there are any discernable signatures? I recall using normalized vegetative data indices on Earth sensing to bring out subtle differences. It seems to me that the thermal equilization might be just a bit off between a near-surface tube and it's immediate surroundings. Admittedly though, the lunar regolith is a pretty good thermal insulator so it's a low percentage angle. |
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