I felt I needed to start a new thread for these slides on Egede A Crater as 99.9% of my research has centred on Tycho Crater. It was quite by chance that I stumbled on what many would say are imaging artefacts on the North Wall of Egede A. Perhaps it is nothing, they are certainly confusing to the eye but I feel they are anomalous and therefore warrant further study. After all should I be looking at what lies beneath or behind maybe? Is it a puzzle? Now I have sat on these slides for some time and have used one particular anomaly in a comparative study on Similar Anomalies. That said the Anomalies can still be found; not on the LROC Quick map where I originally located them but on image M175204950LE. The Quick map location is now of very poor quality at the maximum magnification of 0.5mppx. Please note that NO adjustment have been made to the images whatsoever. This is exactly how they appeared on the LROC Quick map. Image M175 backs up my claim even though that is not of the same quality.
In Slide 1 Egede A is shown at the centre of the image.
Slide 1
Slide 2 is split into 2. The left side shows how the location on Egede A's north wall (Latitude 51.71 Longitude 10.69) appeared on the LROC quick map and the right side
shows the same location but turned 180 degrees. The yellow boxes show my area of interest.
Slide 2
Slide 3 shows a blow up of this location and each anomaly (imaging or otherwise has been identified below)
Slide 3
Slide 4 shows how the location appears on 2 other images in the NASA library
So what are we to think. If these objects are imaging artefact's or amazing alignments of rocks how come they are in such close proximity to one another?
The odds on that are surely a million to one. Even the 'seeing faces in the clouds' theory is stretching it a bit surely.
Future postings will look at what I think sits behind these images and other anomalies that are positioned nearby. What I've realised is its not what I am seeing