590 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
590 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: THE MAN BEHIND THE FACE ON MARS FILE: UFO2831
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The man behind the face on Mars: How he thinks extraterrestrials and their
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architecture may have restructured the entire solar system
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RICHARD HOAGLAND
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BY OMNI MAG.
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Before Richard Hoagland spoke at the United Nations on February 27, 1992, a
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person stepped into the Dag Hammarskjold Library Auditorium and asked: "Is a
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man from Mars speaking here?" I must confess similar questions ran through my
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mind before I first met Hoagland at Omni's New York office. There's no getting
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around it: Hoagland has some unusual ideas about Mars. Monuments--a whole
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metropolis in fact--he believes, are linked to structures on Earth and the
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moon that, in turn, are tied together by an advanced new physics that may have
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spawned "hyperdimensional" space technologies the United States government may
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have gotten its hands on. Needless to say, these are ideas the mainstream
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scientific community wants no part of. That doesn't make Hoagland wrong,
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necessarily, but it definitely places him on the fringe.
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At first blush, he certainly looks normal enough: a well-groomed, bearded man
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of 48 dressed in faultless business attire. Our conversation began on a normal
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note, too, with a discussion of parking strategies in Upper Manhattan and the
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challenges of finding coffee in offices on Friday afternoon. When we got
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around to the subject at hand0--the alleged words described in his 420-page
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book, The Monuments of Mars--Hoagland stepped up to the "mike" like a seasoned
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pol in the midst of a long campaign. And it has been a long campaign. For 11
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years he has crisscrossed the country, trying to get scientists to seriously
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consider the possibility that an advanced civilization has left calling cards
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of various sizes and shapes all over the solar system. Whoever they were,
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Hoagland jests, "they cared enough to leave the very best."
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Well--versed in many areas of science and space exploration, Hoagland has held
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several high posts at science museums and planetariums since 1965. He's been
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space consultant to NBC and CBS News and editor-in-cheif at Star and Sky
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magazine. His most far-reaching accomplishment--the plaque on the Pioneer
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space probe he conceived with Eric Burgess, cofounder of the British
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Interplanetary Society--has left the solar system and is now drifting in
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interstellar space. The message carried aboard the spacecraft could outlive
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Earth itself, Hoagland claims.
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Although closer to home, his current activities are in some ways father out.
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For more than a decade, Hoagland has worked with several dozen scientists
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investigating the Mars face, a mile-long Sphinxlike protuberance first spotted
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in photographs taken by the Viking Orbiter in 1976. During subsequent
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examinations of photos of this Martian region known as Cydonia, Hoagland
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identified a collection of pyramid-shaped mounds and objects he calls the
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city. He and Erol Torun, a cartographer at the Pentagon's Defense Mapping
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Agency, conducted an involved geometric analysis of the region. They claim the
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Martian geometry--which to the uninitiated looks like a bizarre mishmash of
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lines--strikingly resembles the pattern of angles observed among pyramids in
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Egypt and Mexico, at Stonehenge, and even recent crop circles. How could this
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be? Hoagland suggests an answer: Extraterrestrials may have tinkered with our
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planet in ways we're just beginning to appreciate. His investigation, he's
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quick to point out, is wholly unrelated to the UFO abduction phenomenon. "Our
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work has nothing to do with things that go bump in the night or people
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claiming to be snatched from their beds."
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No one denies that Hoagland has performed the most detailed analysis of
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Cydonia ever undertaken. If anything, critics say, the analysis is too
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detailed, given the data available. "Since the pictures are less than ideal,
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there is a tendency to overwork them and draw conclusions that may go beyond
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reason," says NASA Ames planetary scientist Chris McKay (Omni Interview, July
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1992). "There's no doubt the thing looks like a face, but the conclusion that
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it was built by some civilization is a huge, huge leap."
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Cornell astronomer Carl Sagan argues that given the human propensity for
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picking out faces amid random patterns, it's not surprising that somewhere on
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the 150 million-square-kilometer surface of Mars we might find something
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resembling a human face. To him, this feature is no more remarkable than a
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tortilla chip said to display the face of Jesus Christ, and eggplant
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supposedly resembling Richard Nixon, or a radar image of Venus containing the
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visage of Joseph Stalin.
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The scientific community--and NASA in particular--has vested interest in
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ignoring him, counters Hoagland, which he attributes, in part, to the "not
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invented here" syndrome: "After spending a billion dollars to search for signs
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of life on Mars and coming up empty handed, they might be just a little
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embarrassed if a small group of amateurs found the evidence that eluded them."
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NASA, Hoagland charges, has also engaged in a systematic "pattern of abuse,
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ridicule, personal character assassination, distortion of data, and
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misrepresentation of the facts going back to 1976."
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Hoagland's counterattack has become more than a fulltime job. Through Mars
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Mission, the 20,000 member, New Jersey-based public interest group he heads,
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he's lobbying to "open the files" on Cydonia and restore "honesty in
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government." He has touted his cause on TV, while making appearances at NASA
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and the United Nations. In his spare time he tries to raise funds for a
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private mission to the moon or Mars. His efforts have been nothing short of
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monumental. But the question remains: Is it all an elaborate "delusion," as he
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once asked in the book? Is he a latter-day Don Quixote tilting at Martina
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sphinxes? Or has he stumbled upon a phenomenon so fantastic the rest of the
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world cannot face up to it, despite a body of evidence he now calls
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"conclusive?"
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Steve Nadis
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Omni: After so many years studying something the rest of the world either
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hasn't seen or doesn't believe, have you ever doubted your sanity?
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Hoagland: I don't think we're crazy. Posing that question in the book was
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just a way of expressing my own incredulity, as well as sharing with the
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readers the feeling that this stuff is pretty amazing. I grew up on the
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Twilight Zone, Buck Rogers, Robert Heinlein, Arthur C Clarke, Isaac Asimov.
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But I never imagined I'd find myself in the middle of a bona fide
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investigation of possible extraterrestrial artifacts. Never. Ever. So I
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thought it was important to remind the reader that I'm always asking myself:
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Can we prove this; can we test this; can we take this from the realm of
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science fiction to the realm of science fact?
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Hoagland: The weird stuff by definition is the stuff that doesn't fit, things
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not discussed. Exceptions. Aberrations. But in the history of science you
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find, first, there are semiperodic revolutions where all of what was accepted
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wisdom is tossed out, and the weird stuff of the old becomes the accepted
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stuff of the new order. Second, the revolutions are never accomplished by
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those in he field--always by outsiders coming in with a fresh point of view.
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I've been attracted to the exceptions because they may lead to that big
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paradigm shift.
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Omni: What give outsiders the edge?
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Hoagland: Lack of vested interest. People in the field have their careers and
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job security on the line, their house and car payments, maybe kids in college.
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They have reason not to want to overthrow a system that's rewarding them quite
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well. Outsiders don't have the reputation to protect, so they're more likely
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to pursue an aberrant idea. If you're in a field for 10,20,30 years, you
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develop a certain way of looking at things. You develop blinders. The thing can
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be right in front of you, staring you in the face, and you don't see it.
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In the early Seventies, when the American Apollo program was winding to a
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close, the environment had become the big rage at CBS, where I worked as an
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adviser to Walter Cronkite. I could have gone into toxic sludge and made a
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nice career of it, but I decided not to because I was as sure then as I am
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today that if the human race is going to have a destiny, it has to incorporate
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space in a big way. After many battles with the network, I decided to leave in
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1972 and privately pursue space as a critical avenue for the future of the
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human species. At the time, of course, I didn't know that I'd find evidence
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that may be the lever to get society to realize how important space is. If we
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find evidence the human race is not alone, it's not going to be on this
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planet, but through the monuments of Mars and maybe the stuff on the moon, and
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that will have vindicated my faith that, yes, this is important.
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Omni: How did you react when you first saw the face? Did it make a big
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impression?
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Hoagland: Actually, it didn't. I had two opportunities to take it seriously
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and rejected it twice. I have great sympathy for people who say: "Oh my God!
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Come on, give me a break. This can't be real. "Because I've been there. I was
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at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in 1976 when Viking project scientist
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Gerry Soffen showed us this kind of quirky face and said: "Isn't it cute what
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tricks of light and shadow can do?" We all giggled and went about our
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business. It had to be a trick of lighting. Absolutely no way this thing could
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be real.
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Then I went to Boulder in 1981 to attend the "Case for Mars" conference. One
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night I saw a group of people staring at a projection screen with a big blowup
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of the face on Mars. Except this face looked much more striking than the
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knobby, gnarly thing we'd been shown at JPL. Vince DiPietro and Greg Molenaar,
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engineers at Goddard Space Flight Center who'd gone through the original NASA
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data and done state-of-the-art image processing, gave me a copy of their
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monograph and I though, "Nah, it's just freak of nature." I took the
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monograph one, put it on a shelf, and went back to the stuff I was doing.
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Omni: When did the idea finally take hold?
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Hoagland: In 1983, DiPietro sent me a packet of stuff, photographic samples of
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their work on Mars. In the quietness of my den, it was just me and the
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photographs, and I thought, "Damn, this is peculiar!" The images were very
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crisp. They brought out details totally unavailable in the raw data. For the
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first time I considered: What if this isn't just a weird, eroded mountain?
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What if we're looking at an artifact? That simple though set in motion a
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snowballing process that continues to this day.
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Omni: Was it a question of timing, finding yourself in the right frame of
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mind?
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Hoagland: Probably of having the data and peace and quiet to really think
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about it. I began to wonder that it'd mean for the human species to have
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absolute, factual knowledge that the race is not alone. Not as a distant radio
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signal from Alpha Centauri or somewhere out there, but as a set of existing
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ruins in our own back yard, accessible with late twentieth-century technology.
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Balancing the small probability of the against the overwhelming, almost
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incalculable importance, I realized that, damn it, this data required somebody
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doing something more.
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Omni: Let's talk about your big breakthrough--the discovery of something you
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call the city on Mars.
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Hoagland: Well, I was looking down at the Viking imagery, photographed from
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1,000 miles overhead, studying this striking, bilaterally symmetric image of a
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humanoid face. Making the comparisons down a center line, it's about 90 to 95
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percent symmetric. There's no easy way for geology to give you that kind of
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symmetry, Then I started wondering where one might go to get a good view of
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this sculpture. Examining the left-hand side of the photograph, I spotted a
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collection of pyramid-shaped objects. The middle of this complex presented an
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exquisite view of the face looking across the Martian desert.
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In measuring this complex with a protractor and straightedge, I noticed
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unexpected alignments. There was way too much order, pattern, linearity.
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Later, when Erol Torun joined me, I uncovered a redundant, specific geometry
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in the collection of pyramids we call the "city" and in the face--a specific,
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repeating pattern of angles, mathematical constants, and equations, It became
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apparent we weren't looking at pyramids in the Egyptian sense; some appeared
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to be hollow.
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Omni: You assume that at one time these may have been living quarters?
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Hoagland: Yes. Considering the current Martian environment--mostly carbon
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dioxide at one one-hundredth the air pressure at sea level on Earth--it's
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pretty obvious if someone were to live on Mars, he or she would need some kind
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of artificial environment. I was reminded of the arcologies, architectural
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ecologies proposed by Paolo Soleri, which are like Biosphere II in Arizona:
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large, enclosed environments with greenhouses, factories, and energy systems--
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huge three-dimensional condominiums, miles in diameter. The things we're
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seeing on Mars, the individual structures making up the city, seem to be
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pyramids on the order of a mile or two in diameter. This is roughly what
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Soleri was figuring is necessary to accommodate several million inhabitants.
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Omni: In the book you admit that in the early stages of the discovery process,
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you desired there to be a city. Might you have , to some extent, willed this
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city into existence?
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Hoagland: No. I was sharing with the reader my constant ambivalence. I'd love
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this to be true, but also I'm saying to myself, come on, it can't be. We've
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been brought up in a culture which for the last 30 years has shown us a dead
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and lifeless solar system. People think the only place they'll see aliens or
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lost civilizations is on Star Trek. Certainly not in photos taken of any piece
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of real estate in the solar system. I was simply trying to be honest. I didn't
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immediately embrace this; I had to be dragged. Had to drag myself, kicking and
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screaming, inch by inch, micron by micron. Only when we got the numerical
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data, this incredible, precise geometry giving us algorithms, a new physics,
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and predictive examples of astronomy, could I go back and say "It has to be a
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city." This phenomenon has to be a complex designed by intelligent beings,
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because too much stuff checks out. There's a lane of circumstantial evidence
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four miles wide.
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Omni: Maybe so, but some critics like Carl Sagan aren't convinced.
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Hoagland: Sagan has this curious argument, "Extraordinary claims require
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extraordinary evidence," with which I flatly and totally disagree. That little
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syllogism contains a fatal trap: the idea that you know enough to decide which
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is an extraordinary claim. Who's in a position to judge? I can always shut you
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off by claiming your evidence is insufficient because of the extraordinary
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nature of the claim. The critics keep changing the rules of the game--with
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each new piece of objective, scientific data this investigation has marshalled
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in favor of the "intelligence hypothesis." They keep moving the goal line,
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meaning there's no way we can win.
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Omni: So you consider this an impossible burden of proof?
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Hoagland: You bet. It allows people to kill an idea by claiming that (a) it's
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extraordinary, and (b) there's not enough evidence. It fosters a subjectivity
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that is bottomless.
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Omni: You're suggesting people haven't looked into your claims for political
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reasons. But might it be the scientific evidence you've put forward just isn't
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compelling enough to warrant a closer look?
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Hoagland: Well, they haven't looked, so how could they know? That we have the
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data on the table, and the powers within NASA or above and beyond have not
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seen fit to test our hypothesis, says something about the shortcomings of the
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politics of this phenomenon, not the science of it.
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Omni: But on a technical note, if you might address one point critics have
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raised--the tendency to see faces in clouds, on mountains and the moon. The
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human face is the most familiar pattern we're conditioned to recognize.
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Hoagland: That's Sagan's argument, and it falls apart because out of all those
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mesas we've looked at, only one resembles a human face. It also happens to be
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one that's part of a complex possessing stunning geometry. The extraordinary
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details we've found are as specific as finding New York City. What are the
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odds of finding a series of rectilinear structures laid out on a slender
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granite slab in the northeast region of the United States? You could say
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there's a tendency to see rectilinearly, which there is. Somebody built this
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rectilinear table, but they did it because that's what Euclidean geometry and
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the penchant for intelligence compels us to do--to order the universe in
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geometric patterns. And that is they key to decoding the features we're seeing
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on Mars.
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Omni: What other evidence supports your view?
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Hoagland: Near the face, we find a collection of pyramidlike objects that, in
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fact, morphologically, are pyramids. Hard, objective science demonstrates
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we're not dealing with "tricks of light and shadow," but with actual pyramidal
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and/or facelike objects. The point of contention now is their origin. Are they
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pyramidal and facelike because of natural processes--wind, water, erosion--or
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were they built?
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One way to answer that question is by factual analysis, objective computer
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criteria for discerninganomalies from natural background patterns. Mark
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Carlotto and Michael Stein used this technique and picked out the face as the
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most nonfactual, that is, the weirdest, most unnatural piece of Martian real
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estate in the several thousand square miles we looked at. Finally, we have my
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real contribution--the discovery of a geometric pattern linking several
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objects within a few miles of each other on this Martian plane. It's a
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recurring theme whose purpose seems to introduce us to a set of equations
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opening up a whole new window on physics. This geometric pattern then argues
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strongly that this complex was designed. There is meaning.
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Omni: What is this meaning?
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Hoagland: The geometry apparently was designed to communicate two fundamental
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constants of nature: pi, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to the
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diameter, and e, the base of natural logarithms. When you divide pi onto e,
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you get the ratio, 0.865. That number shows up within and between these
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objects dozens of times. The odds of that happening by chance are
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astronomical. That geometry and mathematical code confirms predictions made by
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other researchers, particularly in astrophysics. Basically, it says spinning
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objects like stars or planets should show upwellings of energy at specific
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latitudes--19.5 degrees north or south, for example. Starting with the sun and
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moving all the way out to Neptune, this prediction is confirmed.
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Omni: Can you say a bit more about this new physics?
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Hoagland: This theory, based on "hyperdimensional: mathematics, appears to
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provide a fundamental connection between the four forces of nature. In our
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universe energy flows downhill. Heat goes from hot to cold, from higher to
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lower energy. So we considered that the math at Cydonia is telling us about
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higher dimensions. A spinning object such as a planet, connected to a higher
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dimensions. A spinning object such as a planet, connected to a higher and
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lower dimension, should exhibit a weird energy anomaly, an unusual
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manifestation from an invisible, higher dimension that shows up as an energy
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excess in our normal three-dimensional existence. We found examples of this in
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Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, all of which are radiating more energy
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than they're taking in form any observable source.
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Omni: I a new mathematics and physics is being communicated, who is doing the
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communicating and why?
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Hoagland: Suppose we're seeing on Mars a sophisticated, high-tech culture with
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access to technology based on a physics that is ligh-years beyond our current
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thinking. Then maybe, just maybe, this civilization might leave us, the "new
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kids on the block," clues, remnants, artifacts, to help us along. We have many
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examples on Earth of advanced cultures lending a helping hand to less advanced
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ones. We're losing the race between technology and population. Unless we
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introduce something radically new to grab everybody's attention and make them
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act like they're all part of the same species and stop killing other species
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on this planet--we're doomed.
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Omni: You figure these folks came from outside the solar system?
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Hoagland: Do you see any place in the solar system where a high-tech,
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indigenous civilization could have originated? I went through the list of
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candidates and eliminated every place. If somebody did something on Mars, they
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had to come from beyond the solar system. That was my position until a few
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days ago. Now, some new data has come to the fore that's incredibly
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speculative, but worth considering. There's a string of rubble between Mars
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and Jupiter called the asteroids. There are comets. The origin of asteroids
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and comets is ambiguous. The existing model holds that they are bits of debris
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left over from the formation of the solar system. Now a new model suggests
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asteroids and comets are actually remnants of a planet that exploded. If so,
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where did it come from, and why did it disappear?
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One possibility is that it used to be inhabited by a high-tech civilization
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that developed a technology capable of destroying worlds. If this view is
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confirmed, it will lead to a new theory for where the builders of Mars'
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monuments came from. And a striking object lesson as well. It would be
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sobering indeed, to confirm high-tech predecessors in the solar system that
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blew themselves and their entire planet away because they were too ignorant to
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handle what they'd figured out.
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Omni: How could you verity such an incredibly speculative proposition?
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Hoagland: We could rendezvous with a chunk of an asteroid and see if there's
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something down there. We could look at other bodies in the solar system. If
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we're not dealing with a visit from outside the solar system, then odds are
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they put colonies not just on Mars, but on the moon and other places. There is
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a whole bunch of real estate out there to visit. We've been looking at the
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moon for two years. If someone built the monuments of Mars, maybe they would
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have appreciated the biological role of the e moon upon Earth in the
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hyperdimensional model. But the moon has 15 million square miles, so where do
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you look? The math and geometry made a set of predictions, and when we started
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looking at the most obvious site--on space-based, NASA-based, and Earth-based
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photographs--we found a large crater containing an equilateral triangle, and a
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series of stunning clues and structures that are positively baffling, if
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they're not artificial.
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Our evidence strongly suggests that at one time, there was some kind of large-
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scale habitation and construction on the lunar structure. Again, we seem to be
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looking at arcologies, enclosed environments. The great advantage, in contrast
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to the couple of photographs we have of Cydonia, is that we have millions of
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pictures of the moon, including almost two million photographs taken recently
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by the Pentagon's unmanned Clementine spacecraft.
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Omni: Just how big are these lunar structures, anyway?
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Hoagland: Very big--hundreds of miles across and tens of miles high. The moon
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is an easy place to build very large structures, with one-sixth Earth's
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gravity, no hurricanes, wind, thunderstorms, or earthquakes.
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Omni: Why didn't the Apollo astronauts see anything?
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Hoagland: Well, when I was going through the Apollo transcripts, I found
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comments suggesting some astronauts did see the things we have now
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rediscovered on the photographs, but didn't recognize what they were seeing.
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They were told they were going to a lifeless, uninhabited world and were never
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briefed about the possibility of seeing artificial structures.
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Omni: How could they have been prepared otherwise?
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Hoagland: A 1961 Brookings Institution report, commissioned by NASA, discussed
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this very contingency--that artifacts may be discovered by our space
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activities on the moon, Mars, or Venus. The study described two viable options
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for confirming extraterrestrial intelligence. One was a search for artifacts
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in the solar system; the other, a radio search for signals from
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extraterrestrials light-years away. The only E.T.s we ever expected to find
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were those who call us on the phone from Alpha Centauri. The notion of finding
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alien artifacts, somewhere, was considered politically unacceptable.
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Omni: What, in you opinion, is behind this apparent bias?
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Hoagland: The Brookings document discussed the possibility of finding
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artifacts and E.T. radio signals and considered the potential risk to our
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civilization. But what' the risk in artifacts? They communicate information
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that will change the status quo in science, technology, anthropology, and so
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on. New technology could lead to bigger, better things, including perhaps,
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weapons. Ultimately, Brookings was saying what I said a few moments ago:
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Unbridled knowledge in the hands of children can destroy a planet. So, the
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only safe course, or so Brookings recommended, would be to not tell the
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American people of such a discovery.
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Omni: Since such a revelation could overthrow everything we know, how should
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it be presented to the public?
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Hoagland: Look at what we've lived with for the last 40 years. Every morning,
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as kids got up and every night as they went to bed, they had to consider
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seriously that they wouldn't wake up the next morning, that somewhere, someone
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would push the wrong button and 50,000 nuclear warheads would turn this planet
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into a flaming pyre. Somehow we dealt with this awesome, frightening
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capability by openly discussing nuclear policy and proliferation. We now need
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an adult attitude toward extraterrestrial intelligence whereby we can
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rationally asses the possibility the human race is not alone.
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Omin: How might it "change the history of human consciousness?
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Hoagland: The standard biological models sys the human race is the result of
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trillions of random decisions made in Earth's isolated environment. If you
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roll the dice again, you'll come to the conclusion that, yes, you might have
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intelligence on another planet, but it couldn't possibly look like us. It's
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against that backdrip that we go to Mars. We take a set of pictures. And find
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a mile-long 1,500-foot-high effigy that looks like us. Since you can pretty
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effectively rule out that we did it, you're only left with a few
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|
possibilities: an indigenous Martian culture, and exterior culture from beyond
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the solar system, of a variant--another culture on another planet somewhere in
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the solar system.
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The problem is, it looks like us. Standard evolutionary biology says it can't
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look like us. So it either means something about biology is totally whacko and
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we don't understand it at all, or there has been contact between somebody out
|
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there and somebody down here. In that case, we may be looking at some kind of
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calling card specifically designed to capture our attention. It says very
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|
simply that either the universe creates, over and over agin, conscious
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sentient beings in our image or that somebody went to a lot of trouble to put
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a version of us down on the Martian surface to tell us about prior contact.
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Either scenario is awesome! If there is a universal template forcing
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intelligence to assume a human form, that's pretty amazing; the other
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possibility is that aliens have somehow meddled in the affairs of Earth.
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Omni: How far do you suppose this "medding" might have gone?
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Hoagland: Perhaps the face on Mars is evidence someone has used genetic
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engineering to influence biological development in this environment for
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reasons that are currently unknown.
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Omni: Why would someone do that? For kicks? Profit? Altruism?
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Hoagland: Who knows? But suppose somebody who knew a lot more than we currently
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know arrived here, looked around, and said: "Whoops! They're not going to make
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it." And they did something to give us a better chance, something enabling us
|
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to pass on the favor some day. It may have been a little tinkering or a lot of
|
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tinkering. Suppose they also decided to leave us a memorial, so when we grew
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up and to to Mars we could thank them.
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Omni: If true, that would cause a revolution in science and philosophy.
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Hoagland: The history of science or philosophy can be viewed as a series of
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successive dethronements. A few thousand years ago, we--whichever people we
|
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were--considered ourselves the chosen of God. Things moved along and we found
|
|
maybe we're not so chosen, but at least Earth was the center of the universe.
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|
Then along came Copernicus. For awhile, we clung to the idea the sun is still
|
|
the center of the universe, until we found it's just an average star on the
|
|
periphery of an average galaxy in a universe of billions and billions of
|
|
galaxies. But at least we were still the only sentient beings in the entire
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cosmos. Maybe one reason people refuse to seriously consider the artifacts on
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Mars or the moon has to do with the "last dethronement." If we were to find
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evidence of structures in our own back yard, we'd no longer even be the first
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civilization in this solar system. It was once someone else's!
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Omni: What do you see as your role in this "last dethronement?
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Hoagland: Now I'm just excited about having the chance to explore this prospect
|
|
in my lifetime--just being part of this enormous revolution, being able to
|
|
continue the search for extraterrestrial intelligence and to try to figure it
|
|
all out. That is much more exciting than any place in history. The struggle
|
|
will not be over when NASA finally, grudgingly acknowledges there are
|
|
artifacts. That confirmation of our discovery is not the end point at all. It's
|
|
just the beginning. It opens the door.
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|
|
END OF INTERVIEW
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Medium-angle, unenhanced original Apollo photograph, taken from lunar orbit 70
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|
miles above the moon in the vicinity of the lunar craters Ukert and
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Triesnecker. The mission photograph AS10-32-4822, was acquired by an Apollo
|
|
astronaut using a hand-held 70 mm camera. Date: May 1969, mission: Apollo 10--
|
|
pre-landing lunar orbital test flight for Apollo 11. The highly reflective
|
|
structures and background fragmentary geometric pattern are completely
|
|
inexplicable by any know lunar analysis carried out by NASA. The independent
|
|
scientific investigation currently being conducted by the Mars Mission (into
|
|
this and other NASA lunar photographs--see text) indicates an increasing
|
|
likelihood that these anomalous objects are in fact the product of intelligent
|
|
design. The largest anomalous fragment in the photograph is termed "the
|
|
Castle." It appears to be a manufactured, highly geometric object--exact size
|
|
currently unknown--embedded in a "gridlike" framework (remnants of a former
|
|
"lunar dome") estimated to extend approximately 30 miles above the lunar
|
|
surface. This particular version of the original Apollo photograph (one of
|
|
several Apollo 10 images discovered mysteriously archived under this identical
|
|
frame number) was supplied to the Mars Mission by sources inside NASA.
|
|
Subsequently, several public versions of this remarkable Apollo photograph--
|
|
complete with the Castle and the grid--have been confirmed.
|
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|
|
In this computer-enhanced, false-color close-up of frame III-84M, another
|
|
remarkable object is seen just to the left of the Shard. Termed "the Cube," it
|
|
appears to be a seven-mile-high, one-mile-wide, geometric glasslike structure
|
|
composed of myriad "subcubes"--suspended in a darker, highly eroded, oqually
|
|
geometric matrix. The colors correspond to differing light intensities on the
|
|
original Lunar Orbiter frame: yellow and red indicating the brightest, shading
|
|
to green, blue, and magenta for the dimmest. Note the most intense light
|
|
scattering (red/yellow) is coming from the highly geometric interior of the
|
|
Cube (as opposed to its exterior surfaces). This is totally inconsistent with
|
|
any geologic object, but is highly consistent with a degraded, manufactured,
|
|
semitransparent, eroded glass structure. The highly eroded condition of this
|
|
anomalous feature, and its surrounding, darker structure, is thought to be due
|
|
to prolonged meteor bombardment--indicating literally millions of years of
|
|
exposure on the airless lunar surface.
|
|
|
|
This false-color, medium-angle shot of the distant lunar horizon in III-84M--
|
|
viewed from the unmanned 1967 Lunar Orbiter III, orbiting 30 miles above the
|
|
moon--reveals two striking lunar anomalies together: the Shard (right) and the
|
|
Cube (left), extending vertically miles above the airless lunar surface. In
|
|
this computer-enhanced view, the bright line slanting upward from the left is
|
|
a photographic frame line of the original Orbiter III mosaic; note that the
|
|
structures are not aligned with (or at right angles to) this prominent
|
|
photographic feature, but are aligned with the local vertical--toward the
|
|
center of the moon. Light intensities of the original film have been changed
|
|
by the computer to corresponding colors, to bring out the fainter extension of
|
|
a highly eroded structural "tower" connecting the Cube downward with the lunar
|
|
surface seven miles below; surrounding this lower can be seen other hints of
|
|
sparkling, fragmentary "structure"--indicating that these bright features are
|
|
only the surviving remnants of a once far more complete, much larger,
|
|
intelligently manufactured structure on the moon. Photographic experts,
|
|
geologists, and manufacturing engineers with the Mars Mission have ruled out
|
|
simple photographic defects or geologic features to explain these objects;
|
|
increasing evidence (from other NASA missions) and expanding analysis indicates
|
|
that these light-scattering features--in an airless, cloudless lunar vacuum--
|
|
most likely represent actual surviving remnants of some type of ancient "lunar
|
|
dome-like structure," possibly once covering much of Sinus Medii--perhaps
|
|
constructed by visitors colonizing the moon with extremely advanced
|
|
engineering technology millions of years ago. Return lunar missions will
|
|
either confirm or deny this hypothesis.
|
|
|
|
Lick Observatory photograph of the Sinus Medii central region of the full
|
|
moon. The large white circle is the rim of the sixteen-mile-diameter crater,
|
|
Ukert, located just north of Sinus Medii, viewed from Earth through a large
|
|
telescope under "high noon" lighting. Note the remarkably perfect equilateral
|
|
triangle darkening the crater floor. It was this striking geometric symbol--
|
|
directly connected to the mathematical decoding of the "Monuments of Mars"
|
|
(see text in accompanying article)--which led Richard C. Hoagland in 1992 to
|
|
examine this region of the moon for potential alien artifacts.
|
|
|
|
A ruined skyscraper on the moon? This striking object has been termed "the
|
|
Shard," a name deliberately chosen by the investigation to imply that it could
|
|
have once been part of a significantly larger feature. Photographed on film,
|
|
scanned, and radioed back to Earth in February 1967 by NASA's unmanned Lunar
|
|
Orbiter III(III-84M), the structure is a vertical, "swollen" column--casting a
|
|
distinctive corresponding shadow--standing at least a mile and a half above
|
|
the sharp horizon of the airless lunar surface. (The geometric crosslike
|
|
feature seen above the column is a camera registration mark, placed on the
|
|
Orbiter film before the spacecraft left Earth.) The Shard is located just
|
|
southwest of the Sinus Medii central region of the moon. Note carefully the
|
|
geometric detail visible inside the swollen middle section of the Shard; there
|
|
is no plausible geological explanation for this, or any other aspect of this
|
|
striking object.
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**********************************************
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* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
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