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Originally posted by Demonis
If you wanted to put something on the moon without anyone seeing it, what better way then to get every sufficient scope looking at the spot you want them to, while you do what you want elsewhere?
Originally posted by freighttrain
Just a thought...
If there is NO atmosphere on moon, then how can we see an explosion! Don't explosion require oxygen to flame?
Originally posted by Malcram
Get ready to shield your eyes now. Here we go:
So that's it. Proof positive of NASA's story. I bet all you conspiracy theorists feel reaaally silly now.
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by theflashor
"That's Michio Kaku, BTW. I find it a little ironic that he, of all people, says this in the article. I find him to be no slouch when it comes to slinging his own form of hyperbole."
Thank you Phage ! I am another who had been waiting for your comments on this thread. We were all looking for something visual and that didn't happen. The data will have to be interpreted for us.
Synth
[edit on 13-10-2009 by Synthesist]
Originally posted by Synthesist
Thank you Phage ! I am another who had been waiting for your comments on this thread. We were all looking for something visual and that didn't happen. The data will have to be interpreted for us.
Synth
Originally posted by undo
that room was kinda odd for a nasa earth based set up.. maybe they were transmitting from the moon, from nasa's moon base and the event was a test of their defense systems?
U.S. Naval Air Station Moffett Field. Building 24 Re-Use Guidelines ..... Unable to gain access- Condemned due to hazardous mold.
On September 28, 2005, both Google and Ames Research Center disclosed details to a long-term research partnership. In addition to pooling engineering talent, Google plans to build a 1,000,000-square-foot (93,000 m2) facility on the ARC campus.[2] One of the projects between Ames, Google, and Carnegie Mellon University is the Gigapan Project—a robotic platform for creating, sharing, and annotating terrestrial gigapixel images.