#1
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What if (Craters)
Always liked looking at craters on the Moon,Mercury and now on comets.
Gas planets,and Jupiter must have been hit the hardest,and could be the reason Jupiter has the biggest rock core in the solar system(5 times bigger than the Earth.). Its to bad we can't tell what type of object made the craters. We used a heavy all cooper projectile to create a crater on Tempel1 It added a lot of dust in space. So it was cooper dust and rock dust. Will this dust be of any hazard to a rocket ship of the future? Mars craters are pretty much covered up by sand.,but there are a lot of them around the "Face on Mars" taken by the Viking orbiter. Did meteorites help cave out the image. Eyes nose and mouth fit well.as these craters do tricks with light(shadows) Be nice if the nose was an active volcano with fire coming out of it. We would call it the face of the devil.,and it would be worshipped by warlocks. Craters tell us a lot about the early universe,but need a lot more thinking about. Arizona has the most recent and best one. Bert |
#2
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What if (Craters)
On May 9, 7:07 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Always liked looking at craters on the Moon,Mercury and now on comets. Gas planets,and Jupiter must have been hit the hardest,and could be the reason Jupiter has the biggest rock core in the solar system(5 times bigger than the Earth.). Its to bad we can't tell what type of object made the craters. We used a heavy all cooper projectile to create a crater on Tempel1 It added a lot of dust in space. So it was cooper dust and rock dust. Will this dust be of any hazard to a rocket ship of the future? Mars craters are pretty much covered up by sand.,but there are a lot of them around the "Face on Mars" taken by the Viking orbiter. Did meteorites help cave out the image. Eyes nose and mouth fit well.as these craters do tricks with light(shadows) Be nice if the nose was an active volcano with fire coming out of it. We would call it the face of the devil.,and it would be worshipped by warlocks. Craters tell us a lot about the early universe,but need a lot more thinking about. Arizona has the most recent and best one. Bert What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by antimatter meteors? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Double-A |
#3
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What if (Craters)
"face on mars" looks quite differet on high detail pictures, and dosn't look
anything like a face http://www.universetoday.com/wp-cont...6-0921mars.jpg http://www.msss.com/mars_images/moc/..._may2001/face/ only on bad low detail pictures i looks like a face: http://www.theage.com.au/ffximage/20..._300x337,0.jpg "G=EMC^2 Glazier" skrev i en meddelelse ... Always liked looking at craters on the Moon,Mercury and now on comets. Gas planets,and Jupiter must have been hit the hardest,and could be the reason Jupiter has the biggest rock core in the solar system(5 times bigger than the Earth.). Its to bad we can't tell what type of object made the craters. We used a heavy all cooper projectile to create a crater on Tempel1 It added a lot of dust in space. So it was cooper dust and rock dust. Will this dust be of any hazard to a rocket ship of the future? Mars craters are pretty much covered up by sand.,but there are a lot of them around the "Face on Mars" taken by the Viking orbiter. Did meteorites help cave out the image. Eyes nose and mouth fit well.as these craters do tricks with light(shadows) Be nice if the nose was an active volcano with fire coming out of it. We would call it the face of the devil.,and it would be worshipped by warlocks. Craters tell us a lot about the early universe,but need a lot more thinking about. Arizona has the most recent and best one. Bert |
#4
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What if (Craters)
On May 9, 3:37 pm, Double-A wrote:
What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by antimatter meteors? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Double-A What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by giant invisible pink elephants? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. |
#5
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What if (Craters)
On May 10, 12:47 pm, John Zinni wrote:
On May 9, 3:37 pm, Double-A wrote: What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by antimatter meteors? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Double-A What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by giant invisible pink elephants? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Giant invisible pink elephants have never been observed in the lab. Double-A |
#6
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What if (Craters)
"John Zinni" wrote in message oups.com... On May 9, 3:37 pm, Double-A wrote: What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by antimatter meteors? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Double-A What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by giant invisible pink elephants? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. That info was classified : "TOP SECRET" Watch out for the "Men-in-black", JayZee! HJ |
#7
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What if (Craters)
On May 10, 3:56 pm, Double-A wrote:
On May 10, 12:47 pm, John Zinni wrote: On May 9, 3:37 pm, Double-A wrote: What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by antimatter meteors? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Double-A What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by giant invisible pink elephants? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Giant invisible pink elephants have never been observed in the lab. Neither have antimatter meteors. Double-A |
#8
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What if (Craters)
On May 10, 3:56 pm, Double-A wrote:
On May 10, 12:47 pm, John Zinni wrote: On May 9, 3:37 pm, Double-A wrote: What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by antimatter meteors? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Double-A What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by giant invisible pink elephants? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Giant invisible pink elephants have never been observed in the lab. Well of course not because their invisible, but a giant invisible pink elephant "by its bounty of incontrovertable evidence, PROVES ITSELF." Double-A |
#9
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What if (Craters)
On May 10, 1:07 pm, John Zinni wrote:
On May 10, 3:56 pm, Double-A wrote: On May 10, 12:47 pm, John Zinni wrote: On May 9, 3:37 pm, Double-A wrote: What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by antimatter meteors? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Double-A What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by giant invisible pink elephants? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Giant invisible pink elephants have never been observed in the lab. Neither have antimatter meteors. But antimatter has been. Double-A |
#10
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What if (Craters)
On May 10, 11:38 am, Art Deco wrote:
Double-A wrote: On May 9, 7:07 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: Always liked looking at craters on the Moon,Mercury and now on comets. Gas planets,and Jupiter must have been hit the hardest,and could be the reason Jupiter has the biggest rock core in the solar system(5 times bigger than the Earth.). Its to bad we can't tell what type of object made the craters. We used a heavy all cooper projectile to create a crater on Tempel1 It added a lot of dust in space. So it was cooper dust and rock dust. Will this dust be of any hazard to a rocket ship of the future? Mars craters are pretty much covered up by sand.,but there are a lot of them around the "Face on Mars" taken by the Viking orbiter. Did meteorites help cave out the image. Eyes nose and mouth fit well.as these craters do tricks with light(shadows) Be nice if the nose was an active volcano with fire coming out of it. We would call it the face of the devil.,and it would be worshipped by warlocks. Craters tell us a lot about the early universe,but need a lot more thinking about. Arizona has the most recent and best one. Bert What If some of the large crators on the Moon were caused by antimatter meteors? Perhaps they occasionally hit the Earth too. That might explain the big explosion in Siberia in 1908, and why it left no fragments. Double-A This post explains why some people call you a saucerhead. -- Supreme Leader of the Brainwashed Followers of Art Deco That's better than some of the things I hear people calling you. Double-A |
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