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The Game's afoot -- Again
"All government agencies
lie part of the time, but NASA is the only one I've
ever encountered that does so routinely."

-- George A. Keyworth, Science
Adviser to the President (Reagan) and Director, Office of Science
and Technology Policy, in testimony before the 99th Congress,
March 14th, 1985
As we reminded everyone earlier this month
(see "Will Mars Odyssey Finally Let The "Cat
Out of The Bag?" Feb. 8th, 2002), we are hopeful to soon see
some of our earliest predictions vis-à-vis the Face on Mars come
to fruition with new data from the current Mars
Odyssey mission. One of the reasons that we remain optimistic is NASA's
promise (for what it is worth) that the Face and Cydonia would be early
targets of the spacecraft's visible light color camera and Thermal
Emission Imaging System, which will give us ground penetrating views
of what lies just beneath the sands of Mars.
Interest in this data has been ramped
up this week in a
story on space.com by veteran science writer Leonard David, in which
NASA project scientists describe the early data (it's been in the "science
phase" of the mission since February 19th) returned from the THEMIS
instrument as "amazing", and "a whole new Mars." While
the story is short on details, it's clear by reading between the lines
that the data which is causing such a stir internally is from the infrared
camera, and that raises a whole series of interesting questions. Some
of these may be answered in a press briefing scheduled for Friday, March
1st, 2002.
Other speculations may take more time
to be addressed. Even though we have that previous NASA promise, there
is no reason to suspect that the data to be released on Friday will concern
the Face or Cydonia, or for that matter even address the question of artificiality
in any meaningful way. As President Reagan's science advisor put it so
well back in the Eighties, a NASA promise is not worth paper it's printed
on, or for that matter, the web page it's displayed on.

Sean O'Keefe
But if the data itself is honest
-- and given the new attitude in place since the Bush administration took
office and replaced Dan Goldin with Sean O'Keefe, it might be -- then
we may yet have reason to hope that something interesting will be revealed
on Friday. Whether the subject of NASA's press brief has anything to do
with Cydonia, or perhaps provides further confirmation of our increasingly
compelling "Mars Tidal Model" remains
to be seen. But the important thing to remember is that the way NASA spins
what they present (and make no mistake, just as they
did with last year's Face image, they will spin it) is increasingly
irrelevant. What will matter is what the data shows, not what NASA
decides to emphasize politically.
There are those that will tell you that
NASA is open and honest, that anyone who questions the Agency is to be
marginalized as a "conspiracy theorist". The reality is that
anyone who has had dealings with the Agency, as former Reagan science
advisor Keyworth did, or anyone who has attempted to hold the Agency accountable
to the public, as we have, knows full well the reason that early reporters
on the NASA beat referred to the Agency by its well-earned nickname; "Never
A Straight Answer."
What has always counter-balanced the lack
of integrity in the upper levels at NASA is the fact that it is marginally
a civilian organization, dependant in at least some measure on public
support and congressional approval for it existence. One gets the sense
that the public side of NASA, the one that is always given a free ride
in the press, deeply resents the accountability that comes with this public
trust and would just as soon leave most of its discoveries behind closed
doors under the protective mantle of the defense department which is its
primary client. Unfortunately for the more "black-ops" oriented
among the NASA hierarchy, the majority of the brain power that the Agency
feeds off of is in the public sector, forcing at least a modicum of openness
on certain issues.
We've had a long history of broken promises
and misdirection by NASA (remember how the Agency was going to give "forewarning"
of MGS image releases of Cydonia? Or how for 17 years, they insisted
that there were "disconfirming" Viking images of the Face taken
on the "next orbit" after 35A72, only to finally publicly admit
what we'd said for almost two decades -- no such picture existed?). But
through it all, we have still managed to get our hands on crucially important
data -- like the Viking images of Cydonia, or the early
Lunar photography, or the stunning Pathfinder
anomalies.
So what if, this time, we just focus on
the data itself, rather than how NASA spins it to the munchkin-sized brains
in the press room? Those of us longing for some sort of official "disclosure"
on artificiality or even a radical geologic theory like the Tidal model
are missing the point. "Disclosure" is not going to happen
with the President sitting at his desk in the oval office, with the paned
windows and pictures of his family behind him, dourly reassuring us that
it is worth going to work tomorrow despite the stunning revelations of
the "last 24 hours". Disclosure has been happening all around
us, and right in front of us, pretty much unabated since the "Sirius
clock" turned us all toward a new millennium. We are being given
the data, in bits and pieces, and pretty much allowed to make up our own
minds what we think of it. NASA's own relevancy in the greater scheme
of things is increasingly precarious -- perhaps even by design -- as it
becomes more and more obvious to those of us that are paying attention
just how truly wonderful and strange a place Mars, and our solar system,
really is.
The weak-minded and arrogant among us
(you know, the people who read "Skeptical Inquirer" and the
"diseased minds" Robert
Temple has spoken of) will continue to be comforted by the official
pronouncements, while the rest of Society quietly accepts a new Reality
and scoffs at the caution with which the Establishment treats the data.
The whole pattern positively reeks of
"Brookings."
Rest assured, we are not going to allow
NASA to get away with another "Catbox"
fraud, or another MOLA-like scam, but we need to focus more on what is
important here. If we are as right about this as we have been about so
many other issues over the years, Friday could be a very interesting day
indeed.
Now, if only we had some hint of what
may be coming at the press briefing ...
The first "leak" in this process
appeared about two weeks ago.

A series of images suddenly appeared on
the web, purportedly from Mars and leaked from a company called "IEC".
They included color, infrared and radar imagery of an "Anomaly 502"
that was supposed to be of some Martian ruins just below the surface.
While we have serious doubts about the legitimacy of the image, it is
exactly the sort of "trial balloon" that a "Brookings"
pattern of disclosure would mandate. Put out an image, see what the reaction
is, and decide whether to go ahead with your disclosure based on the response.
So while we were somewhat unimpressed with the execution, the timing and
content of the release jogged our memories and got us to thinking ....
Why a couple of weeks before the space.com
article and the press conference? And why use infrared and other ground
penetrating technologies? Why not just forge a doctored up surface
anomaly?
Then we remembered ...
Mars Odyssey will not be the first
probe from Earth to use ground penetrating technologies in Mars orbit.

The Russians sent two probes, named "Phobos
1" and "Phobos
2" to Mars in the late 1980's, to study the surface and atmospheric
properties of the planet, and the composition of one of its two moons,
Phobos. Phobos 1 failed along the way, but Phobos 2 made it all the way
to Mars and operated nominally for period of several weeks. Its disappearance
has become the stuff of UFO lore, but in the process the spacecraft made
numerous valuable observations of both Phobos and Mars. One of the most
curious was that Phobos density was found to be extremely anomalous. According
to a paper published in the October 19th, 1989 issue of the scientific
journal Nature, Phobos had a bizarre density of 1.95 g/cu.cm ("19.5"
anyone?), meaning it was almost 1/3 hollow! Since both Martian
"Moons" are actually captured asteroids (and therefore consistent
with the Tidal Model), this finding is extraordinary. There is virtually
no way that a solid object like Phobos can be "hollowed out"
in this manner naturally, leaving a really big question -- just who
hollowed it out ... and why?
But things got even more interesting when
Phobos 2 was rotated to look at Mars itself. The probe carried an infrared
spectrometer, a device not too different from the infrared thermal imager
today on Mars Odyssey. While it lacked the resolution of Odyssey's far
better THEMIS camera, the infrared device on Phobos 2 also gave the Russian
scientists the capability to discern buried objects just below the surface
of the planet (covered with sand or dust) -- via their relative rates
of cooling.
And guess what?
In 1989, just after the loss of
Phobos 2, a program appeared on England's independent "Channel
4" revealing the discoveries of the Phobos 2 probe. Among them
was a tantalizing infrared image ...

Click on image for close-ups
This image, taken in the Hydraotes Chaos
region (0.9 north, 34.3 west), showed what seemed to be a fairly mundane
landscape in the visible light spectrum. But when the IR filter was applied
to the same area, an astonishing rectilinear pattern appeared just beneath
the sand. This regular, highly geometric pattern (across an area the size
of Los Angeles!) is strongly indicative of a cityscape just under the
surface. Although some of the rectilinear features seem to be aligned
with the scan lines of the image, others are unmistakably not aligned,
and are also curved and somewhat geometrically irregular, as they would
be if they were wrapping around uneven topography. Clearly, they are incredibly
similar to some sort of buried (regular/geometric) construction or tunnel
system.

And there was no question that a lot of
people noticed just how weird this all was. The program featured comments
from Dr. John Becklake of the London Science Museum (and a very sober
guy), and he left no doubt about what he thought of the images.

Interviewed in front of an exhibit that
was obviously prepared with the help of the Russians (remember, it was
still the Soviet Union then), Becklake was unequivocal: "The city-like
pattern is 60 kilometers wide and could easily be mistaken for an aerial
view of Los Angeles." The program went on to show excerpts from a
Soviet Space Research Institute press briefing in which the anomalies
were discussed.
And yet, all of this high level interest
in this story by scientific heavyweights was virtually ignored in the
United States. It just wasn't reported.
So maybe, just maybe, Phobos 2 gave us
a preview of what we will see come Friday. If the infrared images from
Odyssey are in anyway similar to what Phobos 2 found, NASA is going to
have a hard time spinning the data. They'll obviously try to float nonsense
like "lava tubes" as an explanation, but it is hardly likely
that will stick. Our own model, put forth in 2000 (see "Where's
a Good Plumber when You Need One?", June 2000) that Mars is covered
with subsurface "plumbing", is possibly going to receive substantial
support.
Or, it could be something completely different.
But we have a sneaking suspicion that we're guessing right on this one.
Never forget that NASA is an Agency steeped in ritual and bound by a Brookings-like
code of behavior. Even after their desperate and pathetic attempts to
spin the April 8th Face image, the majority
of respondents on MSNBC's web poll concluded that the new image increased
their certainty that the Face was artificial. Maybe that result convinced
NASA that the time was right to release the next phase of the "disclosure"
data. Or maybe we're just on a pre-determined "disclosure curve"
that can't be stopped.
After all, the Phobos 2 images of Mars were taken on
March 1st, 1989.
Yep. Exactly 13 years to the day before this
upcoming NASA press conference. How's that for a "coincidence?"
Stay Tuned. It should be an interesting day.
PS - If anyone can find an MGS image of the
area in question, we would very much like to see it. It is possible that MGS has
re-photographed this area, but we have not had time to look and match up
specific surface features as of yet.
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