

New Images Of Cydonia Face 14
Thorgal writes: "NASA does it again! Thanks to fine people at Malin Space Science Systems we have best yet image of Cydonia Face, with pixel resolution of 1.56m per pixel and excellent angle, again leaving no doubt about what the "face" really is (hint: a mesa). There is also a perspective image generated from laser altimetry data and even a hiking trail designed for future Mars explorers. Definitely a must see!"
They miss the point (Score:3)
Nothing surprising here.
They have a 3D model of the "face", so what I'd like to see is how best they can generate the 1976 picture from 2001 data, by varying the lighting/viewing angle.
THEN, they can say: "see, you only get a face if the lighting/viewing angle is in these range, and you see an ordinary mesa otherwise". THAT would be interesting. Not just 5 or 6 new pictures with different viewing parameters, but an analysis over the WHOLE parameter space.
Weird Camera Angle (Score:1)
Just the facts... (Score:1)
Martian Reconstruction Task Force... (Score:1)
...or maybe not.
Them Pesky Aliens (Score:2)
It's obvious the aliens have been monitoring our media, and they have had plenty of time to alter their face to look like a normal plateau. Perhaps they simply camoflaged it when the orbiter went over. Obviously a manned mission is the only way to be sure, as their technology can fool any of our instruments.
Thats not NASAS work... (Score:1)
I thought it still looked like a face (Score:1)
Of course it looks different naked. (Score:1)
Cydonia Face, and tell that you love me... (Score:2)
Funny how most representations of extraterrestrial aliens are bilaterally symmetrical and have foreheads.
"Ah, Earthman, you surprise I speak your language so well..."
If only...see the Enterprise Mission (Score:1)
Everyone has forgotten about... (Score:1)
The feckin' Moon! A big feckin' face that looks down at us *every night* and no-one seems to care!
It's really pretty obvious (Score:2)
The totally unfacelike dropoff was in deep shadow, the unfacelike sharp small features were blurred by the low resolution of the image, and the basic outline of the side that wasn't in shadow in 1976 is easily recognized in the 1998 and 2001 images. It's the same feature, and it's obvious why it looked that way in the 1976 lighting. You can even tell the lighting direction in all the images pretty well by checking the shadow directions.
But what about... (Score:1)
I might sound kinda crack-pottish here, but the picture IS from a really different angle...
And IF it was a message intended for us to receive in the late 70s, I think that whoever was sending the message did a pretty good job. Built so that, based on our tech level at the time, we would receive a picture of a big face.
Also: Doesn't Mars have some pretty fierce sand-storms? I imagine 25 years of sandstorms would chew up a big surface structure pretty badly...
I'm not saying that I'm 100% sure it was supposed to be a message, but I'm saying that taking photos from hundreds of miles away and then deciding that it's nothing is no substitute to actually visiting that spot and seeing what it's all about on our first manned Mars mission.
Isn't this getting redundant? (Score:1)