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- neilderosa
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18 years 5 months ago #8872
by neilderosa
Replied by neilderosa on topic Reply from Neil DeRosa
Just wanted to get some more faces out there for public scutiny (and entertainment?)
M020343 "Taliban," sinister looking, but good humanoid features.
Here's "Saint," again but centered and colorized. The scaled pixel with of M030647 is 5.71 m, and the strip width is 2.92 km. So measured with a ruler the Saint is about 100 yards wide and 200 yards high. If I remember right that's smaller than the eye on the Cydonia Face. And the best Face image has about 4 times higher resolution (1.63 if I remember right). The bottom line is that there is not much information in the Saint image. You can't squeeze water out of a stone. Even if it's a picture of a Saint.
M020343 "Birdman," note beak on big face, and small standing eagle in lower left. Maybe I should have called him Bugman. His face is black and wrinkled looking straight at the eagle, head and bug eyes tilted slightly to our left.
Here's Birdman colorized.
M0300647 "Frozen Sleep," note corpse like face, half covered in ice and snow. Corpse's face is even foreshortened slightly as if lieing down. Note closed eye (viewer's left), beard with strands of hair, wide closed mouth, two nostrils right where they ought to be, and excellent shading.
And colorized
Neil
M020343 "Taliban," sinister looking, but good humanoid features.
Here's "Saint," again but centered and colorized. The scaled pixel with of M030647 is 5.71 m, and the strip width is 2.92 km. So measured with a ruler the Saint is about 100 yards wide and 200 yards high. If I remember right that's smaller than the eye on the Cydonia Face. And the best Face image has about 4 times higher resolution (1.63 if I remember right). The bottom line is that there is not much information in the Saint image. You can't squeeze water out of a stone. Even if it's a picture of a Saint.
M020343 "Birdman," note beak on big face, and small standing eagle in lower left. Maybe I should have called him Bugman. His face is black and wrinkled looking straight at the eagle, head and bug eyes tilted slightly to our left.
Here's Birdman colorized.
M0300647 "Frozen Sleep," note corpse like face, half covered in ice and snow. Corpse's face is even foreshortened slightly as if lieing down. Note closed eye (viewer's left), beard with strands of hair, wide closed mouth, two nostrils right where they ought to be, and excellent shading.
And colorized
Neil
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18 years 5 months ago #15984
by jrich
Replied by jrich on topic Reply from
All I see is Jesus. Does that help?
JR
JR
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- neilderosa
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18 years 5 months ago #16286
by neilderosa
Replied by neilderosa on topic Reply from Neil DeRosa
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18 years 5 months ago #8874
by Gregg
Replied by Gregg on topic Reply from Gregg Wilson
That's an interesting theory. There's just one problem, though. Tidal waves leave alot of evidence. I think there would be ample proof of such an occurance.
rd
[/quote]
The evidence can be so large that you don't see it.
However, I will give an example. In Eastern Washington, on the plateau SE of the Columbia River, there is spot where pictures have been taken of the ground being carved down to bedrock. One sees all the layers laid down by a flood. There are about 40 layers. The layers are fairly uniform and show heavy gravel, rock at the bottom of each layer, graduating up to silt at the top. The layers are not hard but relatively loose. No vegetation is found in the layers or between the layers. However, <b>marine sea shells</b> are found, though rare. The entire plateau area is above surrounding land in all directions, especially to the East. The nearest high land is the Blue Mountains, which a long distance. To lay down about 40 layers of soil on this plateau, one has to have an unbelievable flood - about 40 times! And from where?
Gregg Wilson
rd
[/quote]
The evidence can be so large that you don't see it.
However, I will give an example. In Eastern Washington, on the plateau SE of the Columbia River, there is spot where pictures have been taken of the ground being carved down to bedrock. One sees all the layers laid down by a flood. There are about 40 layers. The layers are fairly uniform and show heavy gravel, rock at the bottom of each layer, graduating up to silt at the top. The layers are not hard but relatively loose. No vegetation is found in the layers or between the layers. However, <b>marine sea shells</b> are found, though rare. The entire plateau area is above surrounding land in all directions, especially to the East. The nearest high land is the Blue Mountains, which a long distance. To lay down about 40 layers of soil on this plateau, one has to have an unbelievable flood - about 40 times! And from where?
Gregg Wilson
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- Larry Burford
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18 years 5 months ago #16287
by Larry Burford
Replied by Larry Burford on topic Reply from Larry Burford
Gregg,
Forty world-wide and time correlated flood events would be an eyebrow raiser.
Forty local flood events (especially near an ocean), even in several different locations, would be a yawner.
Can you elaborate?
LB
BTW, if the wandering planet that causes these floods comes around once every X thousand years, shouldn't we be able find evidence of at least several thousand world-wide and time correlated floods?
Forty world-wide and time correlated flood events would be an eyebrow raiser.
Forty local flood events (especially near an ocean), even in several different locations, would be a yawner.
Can you elaborate?
LB
BTW, if the wandering planet that causes these floods comes around once every X thousand years, shouldn't we be able find evidence of at least several thousand world-wide and time correlated floods?
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18 years 5 months ago #8875
by rderosa
Replied by rderosa on topic Reply from Richard DeRosa
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by Larry Burford</i>
<br />BTW, if the wandering planet that causes these floods comes around once every X thousand years, shouldn't we be able find evidence of at least several thousand world-wide and time correlated floods?<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
Also, what I was getting at is that tidal waves leave very identifiable patterns in the rock layers, as the wave lifts and moves land. I found a whole bunch of examples a few weeks ago, while reading about the K/T boundary on the Yucatan Penninsula. Quite a few outcroppings have these patterns. I'd post a link, but I can't find it again. I thought I just googled K/T Boundary, but for some reason I'm not finding it now.
Gregg- I've been by the area you're talking about and it is quite breathtaking. Is there a legend at any vista view in the area that speculates on how they think the land was formed? You see that kind of thing all over Yosemite.
rd
<br />BTW, if the wandering planet that causes these floods comes around once every X thousand years, shouldn't we be able find evidence of at least several thousand world-wide and time correlated floods?<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
Also, what I was getting at is that tidal waves leave very identifiable patterns in the rock layers, as the wave lifts and moves land. I found a whole bunch of examples a few weeks ago, while reading about the K/T boundary on the Yucatan Penninsula. Quite a few outcroppings have these patterns. I'd post a link, but I can't find it again. I thought I just googled K/T Boundary, but for some reason I'm not finding it now.
Gregg- I've been by the area you're talking about and it is quite breathtaking. Is there a legend at any vista view in the area that speculates on how they think the land was formed? You see that kind of thing all over Yosemite.
rd
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