Richard C. Hoagland’s doing it yet again. What’s he doing? Well NASA has been posting photos from the Cassini probe. Recently a bunch of photographs have come back showing some oddball stuff on Saturn’s moon Iapetus. Ipaetus is the same moon that Arthur C. Clark used in his original treatment of 2001: A Space Odyssey as a probable place for an alien artifact. This is because Iapetus is very bright on one side and rather dark on the other. We can see, thanks to the Cassini photos that there is a large oblong patch on the moon’s surface that causes the changes in brightness.
But there are other strange things. A ridge extends for many hundreds of miles, over twelve miles high, it’s a “wall” according to Hoagland. Artificially constructed.
Well I’m no specialist in low gravity geology but I bet there could be some natural process out there that could possible account for that. I don’t know what, a collision in the far past and material building up around the equator might do it. But, Hoagland doesn’t just see walls on Iapetus, he’s seeing square craters, huge ruin fields and tremendous towers. Just like – just like!
The Earth’s Moon and Mars! Looks like Earth is the only place in the solar system that’s just a boring ball of nickel-iron.