The Time We Found Pyramids on Mars

Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Mars has long fascinated people. One of the few objects in the night sky to show a visible color and the only one that wandered, it was a natural draw. As astronomy blossomed and scientists realized that it was another world, visionaries began to speculate about life there.

The first good telescopic observations revealed a world with definite features, areas of light and dark which could be continents and oceans. In 1877, Giovanni Schiaparelli took advantage of a particularly favorable opposition (when Mars and Earth are on the same side of the Sun, and Mars appears high in the night sky) and he drew a map of the planet. In keeping with the belief that the dark regions were oceans, when he saw dark lines across the lighter areas, he dubbed them “canali,” which is Italian for “channels.”

Map of Mars by Giovanni Schiaparelli

Note that although the “rivers” or “canals” are not real, he did see many things that are real — the Hellas basin is a gigantic impact crater, and the “lake” that he depicts in “Thaumasia felix” is actually the caldera of Olympus Mons.

American astronomer Percival Lowell believed that Schiaparelli had discovered artificial canals. Lowell became a major early proponent for the idea of a complex civilization on Mars. He persisted even when later observers failed to find the canals, demonstrated the likelihood of them being an optical illusion, and even when spectrographic data revealed that Mars was not really a very hospitable place — cold, dry, and with an atmosphere too thin to maintain liquid water. The idea persisted occasionally in science fiction until 1965, when Mariner 4 flew by Mars.

In its brief flyby, it revealed a Mars that appeared as dead and hostile as the Moon — barren and pocked with craters. Furthermore, the canals were clearly not present.

Map of Martian Canals by Percival Lowell

Mariner 4 image of Mars, showing moon-like craters

The idea of life on Mars fell largely out of favor as a result of this, but interest in Mars remained. Though the canals were obviously not real, speculation turned from present Martians to Martians past. If there was no civilization now, was it possible there had been in the past? After Mariner 4, Mariners 6 and 7 also flew by, largely confirming the lifeless image. But then that all changed.

Mariner 9 arrived in Mars orbit on November 14, 1971. It was followed within a month by the Soviet probes Mars 2 and Mars 3. On arrival, the probes discovered a Mars transformed: a vast dust storm completely masked the planet. Eventually, the dust settled, revealing a world of wonders previously unseen: staggeringly huge extinct volcanoes, a tremendous canyon system named for the probe (Valles Marineris), dry riverbeds, fog, clouds . . . and something else. On February 8, 1972, Mariner 9 returned an image of what looked an awful lot like pyramids in a region called Elysium Planitia:

Mariner 9 image of Elysium Planitia, showing pyramid-shaped structures

Could it be? Had there really been intelligent life on Mars, which had built pyramids eerily similar to the Egyptian pyramids at Giza? Some other vaguely artificial-looking objects were also observed, and piqued a bit of interest, but none more than the pyramids. That was nothing compared to what would come in 1976, though.

In 1976, two “flagship class” probes arrived at Mars: Viking 1 and Viking 2. Each was an orbiter/lander pair. Their orbiters surveyed the planet in much more detail than Mariner 9 had been able to achieve. In addition to obtaining better resolution images of the pyramids at Elysium Planitia, they also found some more in a region called Cydonia Mensae. As exciting as the first pyramid discovery had been, this really took off in the public imagination, for in addition to what seemed like a complex of pyramids, there was a gigantic face.

The “Face on Mars,” photographed by Viking 1; note that the black spots are data loss, not real objects

A consultant at Goddard Space Flight Center happened to see the images and found his fame in them. His name was Richard Hoagland, and he was to become the most ardent proponent of the Face on Mars. He described the pyramids as a buried city, and the Face as a crumbling monument akin to the Sphinx in Egypt.

There was no new data on these features for some time. No new missions were greenlit until Mars Observer, which ended in disaster when the probe suddenly ceased transmitting shortly before orbital insertion. It wasn’t until September 12, 1997, that a new spacecraft arrived at Mars: Mars Global Surveyor. It eventually imaged both Elysium and Cydonia, and the results were disappointing for anyone hoping to find evidence of life, although many refused to give up the faith. Mars Odyssey 2001, Mars Express, and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter have mapped the planet in ever increasing detail, and the features have proven to be disappointingly natural.

Elysium pyramid, photographed by Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter

It does look like a pyramid, doesn’t it? Even if there aren’t really alien-built structures on its surface, Mars still conceals a lot of mysteries. It boasts the largest volcanoes in the solar system by a huge margin, and also the largest canyon. It is smaller than Earth, but has the same land surface area as Earth’s continents. It has weather, including dust devils and gigantic dust storms. It has ice caps made of a mixture of water ice and frozen carbon dioxide, and water not only flowed in the past, but appears to be sometimes able to flow in the present as well. And who knows? Perhaps by the end of the century, some of us will be living there. And then we can build our own pyramids!

Via: MentalFloss

The Sad Tale of Hsi & Ho

One day in the year 2136 B.C., a hungry dragon tried to eat the sun. The Emperor of China and his people were terrified. At first, a tiny bite was taken out of one side of the orb. Then a quarter, a half and finally the whole sun was gone, and there was nothing but a circle of white light around the black space where the sun had been.

The frightened, but resourceful, Chinese knew what to do. They ran around in the strange twilight, shouting and screaming defiance at the dragon, beating drums, banging gongs, and whacking heavy wooden ducks until the startled dragon moved away. The sun was saved, but the Emperor, now more angry than scared, ordered that the Imperial Astronomers, Hsi and Ho, should be beheaded for failing to warn him in time of the dragon’s approach.

A total eclipse of the sun was seen at that time in China, but Hsi and Ho, as experienced astronomers should have predicted it, since eclipses occur periodically. What happens is that as the moon moves around the Earth and the Earth around the Sun, there are times when the three are lined up in such a way that the moon blocks out the Sun’s light for a period of up to 7 1/2 minutes.

Astronomers have long enjoyed the anonymous rhyme that has become their epitaph:

Here lies the bodies of Hsi and Ho,
Whose fate, though sad, was visible:
Being killed because they did not spy
Th’ eclipse which was invisible

The Great Moon Hoax of 1835

 Wikipedia Commons F Fb Great-Moon-Hoax-1835-New-York-Sun-Lithograph-298Px

In the latest episode of The Memory Palace podcast, reporter Nate DiMeo tells the captivating story of “The Great Moon Hoax” of 1835. According to a series of New York Sun articles published that year, a respected astronomer named Sir John Herschel had observed an amazing array of flora and fauna on the moon, including bipedal beavers, winged humanoids, and blue unicorns. None of it was true. And Herschel wasn’t even aware until much later that he was the star of this bit of science fiction presented as fact. The lithograph above accompanied one of the articles to illustrate what Herschel had “seen” through his giant telescope.

“The Moon in the Sun” episode 24 (the moon in the sun)
icon for podpress the moon in the sun [5:23m]: Hide Player | Play in Popup | Download

IHC Lottery—Post 2012 Leader

To date The IHC Lottery has been by far the most popular posting on Circa71. Thanks to everyone who has expressed their comments and opinions—both are always welcome and appreciated. So I thought I would also post a copy of the recent letter I received from IHC Communications Director, Dr. Soren Ulfert which talks about the process of electing a new leader of the post 2012 world. Also if you’d care to follow the IHC on twitter you can do so @theIHC more info is also available at theIHC.com

IHC Letter 090909

Milky Way Over Ontario

Photo: Kerry-Ann Lecky Hepburn

This amazing photo of the Milky Way over Binbrook, Ontario, Canada, was taken by Kerry-Ann Lecky Hepburn of Weather and Sky Photography:

“I was really lucky that the the water was beautiful and still enough so that the stars casted a nice reflection in the water. In this shot you can also see Jupiter, various nebulas in the MilkyWay, Rho Ophiuchus and the light dome from a distant town.”

A little photoshoppery is involved, but the photo is outright gorgeous: Check out the rest of her work here.

via: APOD