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Originally posted by remymartin
Will you concede it could be natural.
If you spent the same amount of time checking out the geology of the areas you look at using google mars i think you will find the area in question is rich in basalt. and as for the size of the area this reading material here www.answersingenesis.org...
will tell you that a few kilometers of square and column basalt is more likely the answer.
We report on the discovery of columnar jointing in Marte Valles, Mars. These columnar lavas were discovered in the wall of a pristine, 16-km-diameter impact crater and exhibit the features of terrestrial columnar basalts. There are discontinuous outcrops along the entire crater wall, suggesting that the columnar rocks covered a surface area of at least 200 km2, assuming that the rocks obliterated by the impact event were similarly jointed. We also see columns in the walls of other fresh craters in the nearby volcanic plains of Elysium Planitia–Amazonis Planitia, which include Marte Vallis, and in a well-preserved crater in northeast Hellas.
Originally posted by Imagir
reply to post by Deimos
Have you any skills in geology? No I thinK No.
Everyone has its opinion and I try to submit this using logic and trying to remain on this road.
There are people who speak about "Ghosts" here on ATS and that, following your opinion, would not only have to be hunted but also perhaps locked up in a lunatic asylum?
Have you any skills in geology? No I thinK No.
Everyone has its opinion and I try to submit this using logic and trying to remain on this road.
There are people who speak about "Ghosts" here on ATS and that, following your opinion, would not only have to be hunted but also perhaps locked up in a lunatic asylum?