MGS b13503c

This is an interesting MGS image... it appears innocent enough, though looking a bit like it was created by a pencil artist. The strange thing is that the actual browse image is one of the images on the MGS site which is overenlaged into a huge, pixellated mess.

What I have done here in fact is process the smaller browsepage thumbnail image, (which you see reproduced above as a jpeg image; it is likewise anomalously large on the MGS site page) because I'm intrigued by the mysterious treatment of this image.

I am indicating only a few things here that I suspect it may a little less obvious to the untrained eye, all sitting amid (I'm not going to color it all in, and I really wonder- do I have to?)- enough apparent structure that maybe anomalous monuments and buildings on Mars should start to be a little more of an answer than a question... but that isn't all...

I have a "hunch" that whatever might have inspired any mistreatment of this MGS image as deliberate tampering with the presentation must have been something glaringly obvious even to those at MSSS who probably couldn't recognize most anomalies if they bit them on the foot...

Now it took even me a while, while I was coloring these details to make a certain observation...

But having made that observation, do you suppose this could constitute a reason that this image could have been deliberately mishandled on it's way to the MGS site?

But hey, let's not get too cocky yet... let's go back for and see if the rest of a very Cydonia-like face is really in the adjacent oversized thumbnail image, MGS b13503b... let's make a composite.

A little loose near the edges, but here it is, followed by a negative of the lower half, where there appear to be more faces in the largest one...

Well, what do you think? Could there be any foundation to the idea that the more blatantly Cydonia-like a MGS Mars image is, the more likely it might be to suffer mysterious mispresenation?

Return to Solar System Anomalies III Index