(2021-12-17, 11:58 AM)Typoz Wrote: I'd like to add an alternative view.A significantly larger view of the area. Looking at the photo shows many semi circular dunes https://www.theblackvault.com/casefiles/...mber-2006/
The main article link here:
https://www.theblackvault.com/casefiles/...mber-2006/
starts out with a deliberatlely leading or misleading headline: "Crashed Disc-Shaped Object"
I had a real-world example very recently. I was looking at an old family photo, one which was very familiar to me, but one tiny detail was quite ambiguous and somewhat blurry, as well as being partially obscured by the surface texture of the paper on which it was printed. I figured out a way to approximately remove the effect of the paper texture, clarifying the image to an extent. Suddenly I saw what it was.
Next I needed another pair of eyes to look at the newly cleaned-up image and tell me what they saw. There was only one other living relative I could reasonably ask, so I had just one shot at this. I could not afford to get it wrong. So I took great pains not to say anything at all about what I thought I saw. I didn't muddy the waters by saying the equivalent of "Hey, look at this crashed disc-shaped object!". That would have made asking for a second opinion worthless.
Likewise, the only way to get at what is really shown in the Mars photos is to discard any preconceived notions about what to expect. Just walk in there cold, without expectations. Study the whole image in its entirety, as well as the area under consideration. Do look particularly for similar features elsewhere in the image, if any. By all means narrow down attention to that local area under consideration, since it is a very large image and studying each tiny part in detail could take months.
Everyone wants it to be aliens; me too, buts it is likely just a sand dune.