MGS 40503c

A number of weathered Cydonia faces here, and some interesting structures (the area shaded in magenta is particularly stiking in the inverse image, the "negative" of this version), and there's most of a face, large and clear along the right border...

This looks like a job for George J. Haas of the Cydonia Institute, because it doesn't look that different from a Mesoamerican work of art, previously thought to be unfinished or somehow deformed...

George, however, of course realized that not only was the mirrored half technique used to demonstrate the subtle animal aspects of the Face on Mars at Cydonia required to make sense of the "ruined" half of such work, but that it was an expectation upon the interpreter built into not only artworks, but even certain characters of ancient Mesoamerican writing.

Thanks to George's remarkable insights, and others, such as the frequency of the double or "two-face" motif in both extraterrestial and ancient terrestial art, we also now know that if an extraterrestial face looks like "only" half of one... that's plenty!

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