Zetas RIGHT Again!
Prior to July, 1995 ZetaTalk stated that Life on Mars had existed prior
to the giant hominoids from Planet X pouring the Mars oceans into
SUBTERRANEAN CAVITIES while washing ore during their mining operations.
Mars met its demise as a result of visitors from [Planet X],
who set up mining operations on Mars in preference to
Earth where large carnivorous mammals roamed about
in great numbers. [Planet X] has no such carnivores on land,
and as large and muscular as these giant hominoid visitors
are, they quaked at the thought. Where the atmosphere on
Mars was thin, it was ample, so the visitors set about using
what water resources they could muster to wash the ore
they were after. In so doing they sought to control the
run-off on the relatively flat surface of Mars, and did so
in a thoughtless manner by directing waste water down a
culvert. Thus precious water increasingly was sent
underground, and a chain of events was set in motion that
could not be reversed. The surface of Mars cooled as the
atmosphere thinned, and the freezing surface accelerated
this process.
ZetaTalk: Life on Mars
(http://www.zetatalk.com/worlds/w09.htm)
On Dec 10, 1999, Science Magazine and the Brown University News Service
reported definitive evidence of ancient oceans on Mars, and on June 12,
2000 NASA confirmed this.
Science Magazine, Dec 12, 1999
Possible Ancient Oceans on Mars:
Evidence from Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter Data
High-resolution altimetric data define the detailed
topography of the northern lowlands of Mars, and a
range of data is consistent with the hypothesis that a
lowland-encircling geologic contact represents the
ancient shoreline of a large standing body of water
present in middle Mars history.
Brown Geologist finds Evidence Supporting Ancient Ocean on Mars
News Service, Brown University
For Immediate Release: December 9, 1999
According to Head, the team has found four types of
quantitative evidence that points to the possible ancient
ocean:
- The elevation of a particular contact (the border
between two geological units, such as where one type
of surface meets another) is nearly a level surface,
which might indicate an ancient shoreline.
- The topography is smoother below this possible
ancient shoreline than above it, consistent with
smoothing by sedimentation.
- The volume of the area below this possible shoreline
is within the range of previous estimates of water on
Mars.
- A series of terraces exists parallel to the possible
shoreline, consistent with the possibility of receding
shorelines.
NASA finds evidence of Water on Mars
Spaceflight Now, June 21, 2000
Confirming what scientists had long theorized, NASA
will announce Thursday that water has been found on
Mars. The Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft currently
orbiting the planet made the detection. MGS was
launched in 1996 to map the Martian surface. Among
the news reports circulating was a BBC story. The
report today said evidence of liquid surface water was
detected "in the central part of the mighty Valles
Marineris, the 6,000 km long (3,700 miles) canyon
that scars the Martian surface." Images taken by MGS
show blackish, or dirty, water seeping from beneath
the surface in an area of layered terrain and pooling.
And now, Zetas RIGHT Again!
Underground Ice Reportedly Detected on Mars
Reuters, May 26 2002 9:49PM
NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft has reportedly
detected water ice under the surface of the red planet,
according to scientific papers to be published this week,
a finding that could be a giant step in exploration of Mars.
Many astronomers believe Mars used to have quantities
of liquid water on its surface, but they have never agreed
on where the water went. Research to be published in
this week's edition of the journal Science may help answer
that question. Liquid water is seen as a prerequisite for
Earth-type life on a planet. Underground water ice
could be a key to understanding how Mars developed
and could inform future exploratory missions. While
full technical details will not be made public until
Thursday, the detection of sub-surface water ice on
Mars is just what Mars Odyssey was sent into space to
investigate. Launched in April 2001, Odyssey began its
primary science mission last February by starting to map
the amount and distribution of chemical elements and
minerals on Mars' surface.
(http://my.aol.com/news/news_story.psp?type=1&cat=0200&id=0205262149551577)