• Interpretation of Anomalous Structures on the Moon: May 15, 1994

    From Ricky Sutphin@RICKSBBS/TIME to All on Fri Dec 27 15:21:24 2024
    This is a report prepared by a geologist and paleontologist named Dr.
    Bruce Cornet who provides his interpretation of the anomalous structures
    on the moon.

    This report was prepared on the basis of data which was obtained from
    NASA's own archive, and is available to the public. Unfortunately, NASA
    has kept this information under wraps from the public for many years by publishing a catalog with the pictures blanked out, or very badly
    overexposed images of the pictures. Sometime soon, perhaps I will be able
    to publish copies of some of these pictures on the internet in GIF format
    so that you can decide for yourself what these pictures are like.

    This report, and soon the pictures, are clear evidence of the immense
    data NASA has been hiding from the public for over 30 years. This
    evidence is not going to be easy to explain away since the evidence has
    been known to NASA's own scientists for many years. However, it is "too devasting" to admit that NASA may have hard evidence of artifacts on the surface of the moon of proof of ET origins of life, and refused to admit
    to the American people, and the scientific community that it exists. It
    is unfortunate that people who have access to this information have been
    for many years part of a carefully archestrated campaign to disinform and deceive the public.

    Marc Whitford

    Flames will be ignored. Serious dialog is encouraged.


    _______________________________________________________________________


    ~Title: Interpretation of Anomalous Structures on the Moon

    Author of report:
    Dr. Bruce Cornet
    geologist and paleontologist
    27 Tower Hill Ave.
    Red Bank, NJ 07701
    (908) 747-9244

    RE: Interpretation of anomalous structures on the moon, based on
    evidence shown to me by Richard C. Hoagland on 24 April, 28 April,
    7 May, and 11 May, 1994, and discussions of said evidence with
    Hoagland.

    Areas of interest: Central area and southwestern area of Sinus Medii,
    center of moon disk; Mare Crisium, northwest area of moon disk.

    DATA: All photographs at same scale.

    Lunar Orbiter, February 1967

    Original negative from National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC) at
    Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD: III-84M of "Shard" and
    "Tower" on southwest side of Sinus Medii from 30 miles altitude, taken
    by 3" camera objective (film developed on board satellite; scanned
    with 6.5 mu dot scanner; images transmitted, reconstructed, and
    reassembled at NASA). Horizon at 256 miles; "Shard" and "Tower" about
    230 and 200 miles distance from camera, respectively; resolution of
    Shard and Tower calculated at about 70 and 60 meters, respectively.
    Orientation of this photograph 45 degrees to south of Apollo 10
    photographs AS10-32-4854, AS10-32-4855, and AS10-32-4856.

    Surveyor 6, November 1967

    One of seven photographs published in NASA Technical Report 32-1262
    (NAS7-100), entitled: Surveyor 6 Mission Report, Part III, television
    data; published by JPL at Cal. Tech., August 15, 1968. View angle of photograph west from western part of Sinus Medii, showing refraction
    of intense light from Sun (beads are image of photosphere) by surface
    material on horizon.

    Apollo 10, May 1969

    NASA catalog SP-232: AS10-32-4822, AS10-32-4854, AS10-32-4855, and
    AS10-32-4856 of Sinus Medii from 70 miles in orbit, taken by hand held Hasselblad camera. Photographs 4854-56 looking west at terminator
    (lunar surface sunrise line) from above eastern side of Sinus Medii;
    photograph 4822 looking northeast across Ukert crater in the most
    intensively photographed northern edge of Sinus Medii (this photograph intentionally blacked out in catalog).

    The Lunar Orbiter photograph and the three sequential photographs (AS10-32-4854-56) taken from the Apollo spacecraft all show the
    "Tower" (and "Shard") in the southwestern area of Sinus Medii from
    different angles and different perspectives. The Surveyor 6
    photograph shows anomalous geometric structures above the ground, like
    those associated with the tower extending to the north of the "Tower"
    for about a hundred miles. The censored Apollo 10 photograph near
    Ukert crater shows anomalous geometric structures extending on the
    ground for tens of miles over an area the size of the Los Angeles
    basin. All of these unnatural structures appear to have sustained
    varying degrees of damage from meteorite and micrometeorite impact.
    Small impact craters (1-2 miles), for example, exist within the
    anomalous area near Ukert, and clearly post-date the anomalies.
    Recognition of such damage is important in understanding and
    interpreting the nature and time sequence in the origin of these
    structures.

    Apollo 16, June 1972

    NASA photograph AS16-121-19438, looking northwest from above the
    eastern edge of Mare Crisium and across Mare Tranquilitatus from 70
    miles altitude.


    UKERT

    Ukert is a crater-like feature that displays a circumscribed
    equilateral triangle at full Moon (Noon local time) in its center. I
    agree with Hoagland's interpretation that this triangle is not
    natural, because the sides of the "crater" are much brighter only
    opposite the sides of this triangle. The apices or angles of the
    triangle intersect the darkest three areas of the "crater" rim, while
    the brightest three areas of the rim are opposite the sides of the
    triangle. In addition, the brightest parts of the rim are midway
    between the apices of the triangle, and are at 120 degrees orientation
    from one another. If a line is drawn from the centers of each bright
    area across the triange to the opposing angle, the lines will exactly
    bisect each angle. Such regular geometry is not a natural feature of
    any terrain, either on Earth or on the Moon. Furthermore, the
    symbolism of an equilateral triangle within a circle is a two
    dimensional representation of a tetrahedral pyramid within a sphere. Tetrahedral geometry is hypothesized to be the primary message encoded
    in the geometry of the Cydonia complex on Mars (Hoagland, 1992;
    McDaniel, 1993).


    THE SHARD

    The Shard is an obvious structure which rises above the Moon's
    surface by more than a mile. Its overall irregular spindly shape
    (containing a regular geometric pattern) with constricted nodes and
    swollen internodes, if natural, has got to be a wonder of the
    Universe. No known natural process can explain such a structure.
    Computer enhancement with about 190 feet (60 meters) resolution shows
    an irregular outline with more reflective and less reflective
    surfaces. The amount of sunlight reflecting from parts of the Shard
    indicate a composition inconsistent with that of most natural
    substances. Only crystal facets and glass can reflect that much light (polished metallic surfaces are unnatural). Single crystals the size
    of city blocks are currently unknown. I concur with Hoagland that the
    Shard may be a highly eroded remnant of some sort of artificial
    structure made of glass-like material. Other larger structures and
    their reflectivity in the area support this theory.

    THE TOWER

    The Tower represents an enigma of the highest magnitude, because
    it rises more than five miles above the surface of the Moon, and has
    been photographed from five different angles and two different
    altitudes (from 30 miles altitude, and from 70 miles altitude at three different distances). In all four photographs the same structure is
    visible, and can be viewed from two different sides. The Tower exists
    in front of and to the left of the Shard in the Lunar Orbiter III-84M photograph. The distance from the Tower and the camera is estimated
    at about 200 miles, while the distance of the Shard beyond the Tower
    is estimated at about 230 miles. The top of the Tower has a very
    ordered cubic geometry, and appears to be composed of regular cubes
    (similar in size) joined together to form a very large cube with an
    estimated width of over one mile! There is apparent damage to the
    outline and surface of this megacube, because many cubic spaces or
    indentations occur over its surface (these spaces are 50-60 times
    larger than pixel size, and their shapes are not controlled by the
    rectangular shape of the pixel). A narrow columnar structure connects
    this cube with the surface of the Moon. The columnar support is at
    least three miles tall, and tapers towards its base. The taper may be
    in part due to perspective, if the Tower is oriented at an angle and
    is leaning towards the camera. The leaning Tower may be part of a
    larger more transparent structure, which is also inclined.

    Surrounding the Tower are faint indications of additional light- reflective material. The amount of light coming from this material is
    very small compared with the amount of light reflected off the lunar
    surface. In order to make it visible, the surface of the Moon has to
    be over-exposed on the photograph. The pattern that becomes visible
    above the Moon's surface is not caused by the scan lines that make up
    the Lunar Orbiter photography. The scan lines can be seen clearly, and
    are oriented at different angles from the orientation of patterns in
    the sky. The regular cubic and/or rectangular nature of this pattern,
    and indications of radiating structures that connect the Tower with
    the surface indicate that material of low light reflectivity exists
    above the Moon's surface over a large area measured in hundreds of
    miles. The irregular splotchy reflection from some of this aerial
    material may be due to meteorite and projectile damage over millions
    of years. Its highly transparent nature (bright stars can be seen
    behind and through this material) indicates either an open grid with
    cubic spaces or glass-like material held together by some sort of
    structural grid or a combination of both. Other photographs described
    below confirm the size and extent of this grid-like construction.


    THE SKY GRID

    The Surveyor 6 photograph of the Sun's corona at the horizon
    (Photograph published in NASA Technical Report 32-1262) is a view just
    to the north of the Tower (less than 100 miles). Total image was
    recorded in primary data, and variations in image reproduction are due
    to processing differences. Two major anomalies are apparent in this photograph: 1) sunlight at the surface of the Moon is refracted
    towards the camera and appears as elongate beads of bright light on
    top of the horizon (JPL measurements indicate light saturation for the
    camera was reached in these beads); 2) a regular cubic pattern of
    horizontal benches appears above the surface, and extends nearly as
    high as the view in the photograph to an altitude of several miles.
    Due to the angle of incidence of backlit sunlight from the Sun, which
    was located below the horizon, the visibility of the pattern above the
    surface decreases with increasing angular reflection from the center
    of the Sun. This means that whatever was causing the reflection and
    refraction above the Moon's surface is geometrically dependent on the
    Sun's position below the Moon's horizon, and is therefore not likely
    an artifact of imaging, reproduction, or processing. Six additional
    pictures of this horizon were taken within 90 minutes, and if
    available (obtainable) will provide additional data for further
    analysis.

    The bright beads of light on the surface decrease or become more non-continuous laterally along the horizon. This anomalous beading
    was explained by NASA as diffraction by fine dust suspended above the
    surface. No such suspended dust was found by the Apollo astronauts,
    and an alternative hypothesis is warranted. I agree with Hoagland's interpretation that a) the light is refraction, and b) the intense concentration of light is likely caused by glass imaging the Sun from
    beyond the horizon. It is unlikely that the material causing this
    phenomenon is natural dust or glass tectites on the surface, which are
    largely opaque to only partly transparent. The glass refracting the
    light has to be nearly transparent to transmit so much light to such a
    height above the surface, particularly if the refracting material has
    any depth to it. It may represent the basal more intact part of a superstructure that is apparent above the surface. Because of less
    damage, and more massive glass support structures at the base (visible
    in some photographs as a hierarchy of stacked glass arches, each with
    expanded bases), more light is conducted and focused there like a
    series of glass lenses. Simple reflection can be ruled out as an
    explanation for the beads because of the position of the Sun below the
    horizon.

    The three Apollo 10 photographs showing the Tower in the distance
    also show the grid structure from above. These photographs were taken
    at three different distances from the Tower as the Apollo spacecraft
    moved towards the Tower. Within the sky above the horizon and around
    the Tower a regular grid pattern emerges with proper contrast control.
    This grid pattern appears to be three-dimensional, and is expressed as
    dark lines with random points of reflection around those lines. The
    grid appears to be some sort of support structure, perhaps formed from
    a metallic rebar. The reflective material associated with it is cubic
    and hexagonal in design, but incomplete. With different attitudes or
    angles of sight, different areas of the grid structure become
    illuminated or reflective, implying that angle of incidence is
    important. I agree with Hoagland's interpretation of this material as
    remnant portions of the glass structure, which still remains attached
    and suspended above the Moon's surface on a metallic cross support
    structure. The Tower, by contrast, is visible in all three
    photographs, because there is much more glass remaining than on the
    suspended grid structure around the Tower. Even from different angles
    and distances in these photographs, the top of the Tower appears as a
    giant cube made up of smaller cubic and hexagonal objects.

    There is no way to get around this evidence once it becomes
    apparent. Altering the contrast of the Moon's surface can make this
    faint structure seem to disappear, but such photographic manipulation
    (cf. NASA catalogs) will not invalidate it. The evidence that
    Hoagland has brought to light may assail one's sensibilities because
    of its magnitude and artificial implication, but it cannot be
    dismissed or ignored. It is there and it must be explained.


    THE CITY COMPLEX NEAR UKERT

    Photograph AS10-32-4822 in NASA catalog SP-232 is blacked out,
    along with several other photographs. When it was ordered, the image
    was of high quality, contrary to what was implied by it being blacked
    out in the catalog. Instead of a poor photograph, the image shows
    features near Ukert crater that defy conventional explanation. A
    linear dome-shaped hill runs diagonally across the photograph. To the
    north of that hill a large area exists with regularly aligned rows of structure. Within this anomalous area more than a dozen small craters
    can be seen that modify the landscape. From a distance the regular
    rows appear like benches. On Earth such a feature would be
    interpreted as the pattern produced by the eroded edges of layered
    rocks that dip below the surface. But on the Moon there have been no
    physical processes that can account for such a regular geologic
    structure. Furthermore, rills and wrinkles on the surface of a
    cooling magma outflow do not form such a regular pattern, as is
    evident in so many mare on the Moon. And this anomalous pattern has
    definite boundaries beyond which it is absent.

    Upon magnification, this anomalous pattern begins to take on a
    different character: Rectangular features exist along the rows, with
    many having gaps between them. In addition, thin spires project up
    from the surface in several places along some rows. Upon further
    magnification some of the rectangular structures take on a form like
    buildings and skyscrapers. Resolution at high magnification (for the
    image I saw) is not good enough to resolve more than the outlines of
    possible buildings. The whole area resembles what one might expect
    for a city the size of Los Angeles that had been abandoned and left to
    decay for centuries. The crater impacts and constant barrage from micrometeorites over millions of years would have provided an abrasive
    force as damaging as our weather and earthquakes on Earth over
    centuries or even decades.

    I agree with Hoagland that someone or some group within NASA
    deliberately concealed this picture in the catalog because of its
    content, and that this area may contain one of several city complexes
    that were built under an enormous glass dome within Sinus Medii. The
    sheer implications of such massive structures on the Moon, if verified
    by an open and honest visit by astronauts to the Moon, would cause Man
    to rethink many ideas and question many beliefs about other
    intelligent life in the Universe. Clearly, such structures are well
    beyond our current technologies, and rank with the Pyramids and Sphinx
    on Earth, and with the Cydonia complex and its humanoid face on Mars,
    as major mysteries of our Solar System.

    THE DOME OVER MARE CRISIUM

    Further evidence for such massive constructs on the Moon can be
    found in Mare Crisium. The photograph that Hoagland showed me of that
    area (NASA photograph AS16-121-19438) has a strange set of large,
    concentric, circular light patterns within the mare. To one side an
    emormous spire or tower rises from the surface within the perimeter
    of these light circles. Magnification of the area around this spire
    shows cubic patterns like those around the Tower in Sinus Medii.
    Numerous holes of varying size can be detected within this cubic
    pattern, probably caused by meteorites. Around the edges of these
    holes I can see layers of light-reflecting cubic glass-like material
    and suggestions of strands of rebar support. Below this cover on the
    ground there is more structure, which can be detected under some
    of the holes. There is an unusual interference pattern below the
    cubic pattern as well. None of these patterns can be explained as
    normal or natural. I interpret the major cubic pattern as
    reflections off rebar and micrometeorite-frosted glass of the dome
    that covers most of Mare Crisium. I interpret the pattern below the
    dome as possibly caused by artificial structures on the surface of
    the Moon, such as the city-like construct near Ukert, and the
    concentric circles of light over the surface of Mare Crisium as
    light reflection and refraction through the remaining portions of
    the glass dome.

    I support Hoagland's interpretation that the anomalous patterns
    in photographs from Sinus Medii and Mare Crisium cannot be explained
    as natural. I further support his interpretation that these patterns
    above the surface are caused by enormous structures of artificial
    origin, structures that may represent the remains of glass domes that
    were built to cover, protect, and provide a life-support environment
    for habitable structures on the surface.

    Clearly, further independent investigation and analysis by
    experts is warranted. There is also a relevant need to press the
    Pentagon into releasing all 1.5 million Clementine photographs
    immediately and without censorship.




    _______________________
    Dr. Bruce Cornet

    May 15, 1994

    ---
    ■ Synchronet ■ Time Warp of the Future BBS - Home of League 10 IBBS Games