It appears like a small rock formation, looking like a 3 sided pyramid. The light is reflecting off the left side and the shadow is cast on the
opposite side. This makes it look like a floating object. My 3 centos.




Originally posted by Allred5923Good for you.
I have been a Internet friend of Zorg for some time now
brought the pic to a simple "Paint" program to look for variations of shadow, pretty amazing that there is nothing toeing it to the ground ArmapEven when the shadow is made brighter by changing the light levels?
It is completely suspended in air, it does seem to have some kind of propulsion system to levitate and it is clearly an "ANOMOLY" of different articulated dimensions.It does not look to be in the air more than the other areas of that photo, and I don't see anything anomalous in it.
This is a pic from inversion:What design effect, I don't understand what you are saying, and I don't have the slightest idea of what a "Tassette Blue" may be.
You can clearly make out the design effect and the of the "Anomaly" and it is ironic it was basically, as far as I can tell, on the structural design of "Tassette Blue" (SP?}
Zorgon is not one to be frivolous with examples of thing's of this sort, I think it deserves the attention. IMHO.I don't see why you talk about Zorgon, he has not been on this thread, and even if it was and if he was talking about the photo I would be saying the same things, he may wear a crown, but I am not impressed by that.
Now remember that this is infrared imaging, so the lighter color the object, the more heat it is generating in the infrared and the cooler it is with the darker colors.The object may have a brighter colour, meaning that it's hotter, but that does not mean that the object is "generating" heat, as Skipper wrote, it means that the object is emitting heat, it says nothing (because it's not possible) about the source of the heat. A piece of metal that was left on a fire for some time may emit a lot of heat but it's not generating it, a human being is generating it but it looks (and is) cooler than the piece of metal on an infrared photo.