Dean,
I'd like to think they are geysers. However, I don't think water is able to
casting such dark shadows. Yet some of those streams do look like water is
spewing out. It's rather inconclusive to me. I just don't want to fall into
the same category as the "esteemed" Dr. Richard C. Hoagland, where every
anomaly is, without question and undeniably, a space ship.
Blake
···
-----Original Message-----
From: Dean [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, January 04, 2001 9:38 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [allplanets-hollow] Geysers?
Blake,
About those Mars pics- I think that they really could be geysers. The spray
seems to open up at the top, where the spray dissipates. A construction
would tend to come to a point, but in the pic, the upper portion seems to
open up into a spray.
By the way, I put the image up on my site- it is the last image down.
http://skyboom.com/hollowearthpuranas/index15.html
Dharma/Dean
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[email protected]
Blake,
They could be petroleum geysers.
Dean
Dean,
I'd like to think they are geysers. However, I don't think water is able
to
casting such dark shadows. Yet some of those streams do look like water is
spewing out. It's rather inconclusive to me. I just don't want to fall
into
···
the same category as the "esteemed" Dr. Richard C. Hoagland, where every
anomaly is, without question and undeniably, a space ship.
If they are geysers, they're really high-spouting. This actually
supports the possibility, since the gravity of Mars is considerably
less than that of the Earth. In other words, liquid under great
pressure would/could indeed shoot very high into the Martian
atmosphere, due to the lessened gravity.
--Mike
--- In [email protected], "Frei, Blake"
<blake_frei@j...> wrote:
Dean,
I'd like to think they are geysers. However, I don't think water is
able to
casting such dark shadows. Yet some of those streams do
look like water is
spewing out. It's rather inconclusive to me. I just don't want to
fall into
the same category as the "esteemed" Dr. Richard C.
Hoagland, where every
anomaly is, without question and undeniably, a space ship.
Blake
From: Dean [mailto:0108@t...]
Sent: Thursday, January 04, 2001 9:38 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [allplanets-hollow] Geysers?
Blake,
About those Mars pics- I think that they really could be geysers.
The spray
seems to open up at the top, where the spray dissipates. A
construction
would tend to come to a point, but in the pic, the upper portion
seems to
open up into a spray.
By the way, I put the image up on my site- it is the last image
down.
···
-----Original Message-----
http://skyboom.com/hollowearthpuranas/index15.html
Dharma/Dean
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[email protected]
Mike,
With all due respect, the fact that Mars photos have shown cloud cover
obscuring the top of Mons Olympus, 15 miles high, and that dust storms can
cover the face of the planet, both suggest that there is a heavy atmosphere
on Mars, as well as strong-enough gravity to keep it there.
IMHO,
Dharma/Dean
···
If they are geysers, they're really high-spouting. This actually
supports the possibility, since the gravity of Mars is considerably
less than that of the Earth. In other words, liquid under great
pressure would/could indeed shoot very high into the Martian
atmosphere, due to the lessened gravity.
--Mike