ApolloHoax.net
Apollo Discussions => The Hoax Theory => Topic started by: onebigmonkey on March 23, 2015, 06:12:57 PM
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So..Adrian made me look at Chandrayaan's images again, and one of the ways you can browse for data (a javascript globe) showed an image I hadn't seen before that covered Apollo 16's landing area.
So I requested the data and set about re-writing the page for Apollo 16's surface features and spotted the following:
(http://i59.tinypic.com/2nq5g9h.jpg)
The left hand view is the LRO photograph from here
http://featured-sites.lroc.asu.edu/lroc_features/Apollo%2016/feature_highlights/94
and the Chandrayaan data is from TMC_N_20090801T023801556B
Thoughts?
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The sharp eyed amongst you may have noticed another dark blob to the right of the LM's crater.
There's a corresponding long shadow in the LRO image.
I'd assumed there was large rock causing it, but guess where the LRV is parked....
http://lroc.sese.asu.edu/news/uploads/M175179080LRb_thumb.png
(http://i58.tinypic.com/95wg9k.jpg)
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I always particularly like when "evidence" thesr clowns offer actually undermines their own arguments. Nice one onebigmonkey.
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And no sooner do the hoaxers get what they want in terms of corroborating evidence from a non-NASA source than the goalposts move with lightning speed.
According to some idiot over at ATS, the guy in charge is 'ex-NASA', the images were downloaded when not many people were around, and the whole thing is compromised because India is in cahoots with NASA.
I'm surprised their knees can stand the sudden strain of that rapid jerking movement.
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More like kids playing baseball in the street: not that manhole, the other one!!
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I did some more poking around the ISRO site and found the HySI (HyperSpectral Image Scanner) data covering Taurus Littrow. With some processing you can extract the following from image HYS_NR_20090107T011356760
(http://i57.tinypic.com/s1m96r.jpg)
Nothing spectacular to speak of, and it isn't of a high enough resolution to reveal any Apollo details, but as best I can tell from looking through Lunar Orbiter images the mottling features you see on the north and south massifs are not visible at all in pre-Apollo photographs.
They are, however, visible on Kaguya, Chang-e'2 and now Chandrayaan images of Taurus Littrow, and hey guess what the patterns of light and shade are an exact match for what be seen in Apollo 17's 16mm approach footage and Hasselblad images.
Which is nice :)