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FACE(ing)
Mars. Whither the Cydonians now?
Roger Keeling &
Randolfo Pozos PhD of The U.S Mars Project interviewed
Hologram Tales: When
and how was the case of the Cydonian anomalies first brought to
light, and when was it the Group began to realise its significance?
RK: The first image was captured by the Viking "A"
orbiter in 1976, soon after it arrived in Mars space. That image,
Viking 35A72, contained the low sun-angle image of the "Face,"
and was noticed by NASA personnel very soon after it was received.
The story goes that they were at first quite excited about it, then
quickly dismissed it as nothing more than an amusing optical illusion
-"a trick of light and shadow."
Except for a few fringe publications - UFO watchers, that sort of
thing - the image was all but forgotten. In 1979, it was "rediscovered"
by two Lockheed imaging engineers who were working at the Goddard
Space Flight Center: Vince diPietro and Greg Molenaar. They had
seen the image in a fringe publication and thought for sure it must
be a fake. When they came across it in NASA's public files, they
were quite astonished. They decided to run some image enhancement
efforts on it, and eventually decided they were on to something.
Eventually they self-published a little monograph. Both, I understand,
are now a little bitter about how they've been treated by the scientific
community, and given some of the reactions we've seen their anger
is probably not misplaced.
At the 1982 "Mars Conference" in Boulder, Colorado, the
two tried to give a formal presentation about their work but weren't
permitted to by the organisers. The story I've heard is they just
commandeered a classroom at the college where it was all going on,
and talked to anyone who wanted to listen. One of those was a largely
self-educated science writer named Richard C. Hoagland. Hoagland
is a remarkable person, in both good and bad ways. He really became
obsessed with this whole thing, but thanks to that was able to contribute
an enormous amount of energy and quite a few important ideas.
It was Hoagland who first noted that such a thing as the Face -
if it really is artificial - probably wouldn't exist in isolation.
There would be other artificial objects around it. He checked the
region around the Face, and sure enough found stuff that didn't
look like it ought to be there. The biggest finding was what we
now refer to as the "City," a huge collection of pyramidal
and other structures some 8 miles southwest of the Face. From those
structures, one would be accorded a truly stunning view of the Face,
whether artificial or natural. The intervening years have seen a
huge amount of "administrative history" which is probably
not worth delving into here. Suffice it to say, Dick served both
as a remarkable magnet for people, and a divisive force wearing
people out or pushing them away, often in great anger.
Hologram Tales: So how was The Mars Project formed, then?
RK: Dick actually came up with the name, taken from Werner
von Braun's book. We didn't know it at the time, of course, but
The Planetary Society also has a "Mars Project" of its
own . . . an in-house committee that follows Mars- related events.
Your readers shouldn't confuse us with them.
Hologram Tales: How do you personally view Mr. Hoagland's book,
The Monuments of Mars?
RK: Well, it has been and pretty much remains the only book
out there that really lays out the basic argument. I believe that
even before this interview appears in print, a new updated version
Monuments may be issued by North Atlantic Books in Berkeley. For
better or worse, Dick's interpretation of things remains the primary
version most folks have heard. My feeling is that Dick has done
a great good thing by keeping this whole area alive in the public
mind.
His book - despite some of the most woefully awkward writing and
punctuation ever seen - really is a "good read." And no
one will ever fail to note Dick's role in things, since he certainly
has been effective in writing history to his advantage. Scientifically,
however, Dick's book isn't that useful. You'll get 50 times more
real stuff just reading Dr. Carlotto's two articles from the peer-
reviewed scientific press.
For all of Dick's observed mathematical alignments - many of which
are true, by the way - the data and interpretations that would move
scientists must meet higher standards of rigorousness than Dick's
willing or able to provide.
Hologram Tales: So that brings us to the crux of this
issue. What would you list at the Project's main scientifically
oriented reasons for believing the origins of the Cydonia anomalies
to be artificial?
RK: First off, no one here argues that we know the objects
to be artificial. That cannot be known for sure until better data
is returned from Mars. We just argue that evidence exists which
suggests artificial origin . . . enough evidence so that this thing
must be taken seriously, something that neither NASA nor the scientific
community have been willing to do. The first evidence was just the
visual stuff. It looked like a Face, after all. When diPietro and
Molenaar first found the image, it was merely a batch-processed
NASA print.
One theory held that if you cleaned up the signals, many of the
face-like qualities would vanish if it really was just a "trick
of light and shadow." But they didn't; on the contrary, it
got more face-like. And there were all those strange, artificial-seeming
objects in the area, many with oddly-precise mathematical relationships
to the "Face." For example, draw a circle centred on the
so-called "town square" of the City, with a radius just
large enough to encompass the entire of the major City structures.
Call the edge furthest from the Face "0," the center "1"
and the point on the circle's circumference closest to the Face
"2."
You'll find that the far edge of the Face falls precisely one circle
circumference away from Point 2; and then the so-called "Wall,"
another artificial-seeming object about 8 miles northeast of the
Face, is precisely three circle circumferences from Point #2. Or,
to put it another way, measuring from Point 0 to Point 1 to Point
2 to the Face to the Wall, you get a doubling: zero to 1 to 2 to
4 to 8. That, by the way, was first observed by an artist who was
involved in the whole thing, Kynthya Lynn. There are a lot of other
quirky things, but none by themselves really added up to a scientifically-compelling
argument.
RP: Up to a point there, we were just flying on our intuition.
The first really hard science came from Dr. Carlotto - one of the
world's top image enhancement experts. When he got interested, he
did so fully expecting that his analysis would dispel the whole
thing quickly. But instead, his first enhancements were actually
quite shocking to us. The teeth in the Face, for example, appeared
only as a ragged line on the diPietro/Molenaar enhancements. They
came out with a threatening clarity in Mark's version.
RK: Then came Mark's application of the "shape from
shading" algorithm. This system was initially created, I understand,
to identify Soviet tanks in Eastern Europe. The program didn't know
faces, nor cared, and when Carlotto applied it to the Viking images
the result was dramatic. The program projects the shadows in the
image backward to reconstruct the object that made them.
Once that's done, you can move the sun around the object to any
angle you want, within the computer, and get a sense of what you're
really seeing. Of course, it's not perfect, but what Carlotto produced
still cannot be dismissed. He proved that the Face really is a face.
It has the shape it has, no matter where you stand to look at it.
Carlotto certainly didn't prove that the object was artificial.
There's nothing in this particular bit of work that rules out natural
origin. But the significance of the work is simply this: for about
12 years, NASA swore that the Face was nothing more than "a
trick of light and shadow."
And they were wrong, a fact I'm not sure they've come to grips with
even now. They swore the world's "best" scientists had
been all over that image and had concluded that it was nothing more
than an optical illusion.
RP: Of course, Mark knew that this was not enough. It still
didn't prove whether the object was artificial or natural; indeed,
it didn't even begin to approach that question. And, besides, there
are still those who argue about his shape-from-shading work. I've
heard people dismiss single-source shape from shading as being unreliable.
That's not really true, of course, but as there is a kernel of truth
in it so they grasp at it as a way to deny any possibility of the
Face being artificial. Carlotto's next step was, quite frankly,
just brilliant. He applied "fractal analysis" to the Face.
This comes from the emerging area of chaos theory. Like shape-from-shading,
the fractal algorithms Carlotto used were devised for military purposes.
They rely upon the fact that natural terrain, like most natural
objects, tends to be "high fractal." Like a tree, which
branches, branches again, and so forth.
Human-created objects, on the other hand, tend to be architectural
in nature. The computer can look at an image and distinguish low-fractal
from high-fractal areas. It doesn't know faces, of course. Just
fractals.
RK: And when he applied it to the Face and the City, both
lit up like a Christmas tree. It varies a bit from the low sun angle
to the high sun angle images, and again cannot be considered definitive
proof of artificial or natural origin. But the results strongly
indicate artificial origin. You cannot rule artificial origin out
now . . . and still claim to believe in the scientific method, that
is.
True, you can say in your gut you don't believe the objects were
intelligently created; you can say you base that on a total consideration
of what we know about space, about the histories of the planets,
whatever. But don't claim to base your intuitive declaration on
the scientific method.
Because at this point, the data cannot support either a claim that
the objects are artificial, or natural. There's about equal evidence
to support both views. And, frankly, I think I'm being generous
when I say that.
Hologram Tales: How so?
RK: Well, a very wise RAND scientist said something to
me that I've never forgotten. He noted that if you send a problem
to a shoemaker, what you'll get back will probably look like a shoe.
And if you send a problem to a geologist, what you'll probably get
back will look like geology. Those who claim the Cydonia anomalies
are natural do so almost entirely upon the say-so of planetary geologists.
But let's consider something: suppose - just for a minute - that
the objects are definitely artificial. Then what scientist or professional
would have something useful to tell us? Geologists? Of course not.
You'd want to talk to anthropologists, architects, city planners.
Geologists could contribute, but they'd be pretty far down the ladder.
They are trained to see geology; hand them an image of Mars - a
place they already know has nothing but geology - and, sure enough,
they will find a geological explanation for everything there. Nothing
wrong with that so long as you know that everything really is natural,
and geological. But these are the same guys who were making fun
of plate tectonics as late as 1970.
These are the same guys who, as late as the 1950s and early '60s,
thought Arizona's Meteor Crater most certainly wasn't caused by
a meteor. They've never been to Mars; God knows what errors they've
made already. What we know about Mars is about a billionth of what
we know about Earth, and they're still trying to digest the whole
plate tectonics thing here. I'm not attacking geology by saying
this.
It's a fine discipline full of some brilliant people who've done
some great work. But when it comes to this whole issue, the hubris
we've seen has been pretty stunning. They shouldn't be so certain
about things until they know; and they cannot possibly know until
we get a whole heck of a lot of better data back from that region
of Mars.
Hologram Tales: So what famous members of the establishment
have opposed the ideas of the Mars Project, and how have they gone
about it?
RK: The short answer is nearly everyone, and mostly by
benign neglect. We do have some quiet supporters out there. Most
of them, so far as I know, really aren't convinced by the data and
analysis we've done. But they do think its worth taking seriously.
But those who've called it rubbish, they are pretty much everywhere.
I'd rather not start pointing fingers at any single person, however,
because that's not a very productive thing to do. We hope to at
least convince them to think about it more seriously. It never bothers
us too much when someone says, "This whole theory is absurd,
but you appear to be reasonable and honest and sane."
Hologram Tales: Have the opponents of the Mars Project
ever put up any scientific evidence against you, and how have you
countered it?
RP: The primary arguments have focused on the implausibility
of the Face as anything other than a product of natural forces.
By and large, scientists have avoided considering the topic at all
with an open mind, because to do so seriously would - in their estimation
- give the question respectability. Usually, critics tend to discount
the images and say there is no need for counter evidence because
they have little respect for the basic data in the first place.
No one, to this date, has presented any compelling arguments or
evidence actually disputing the current data.
Hologram Tales: Any notables who've taken up your banner?
RP: C. West Churchman, a noted philosopher at the University
of California at Berkeley and a innovator in systems theory who
is highly regarded in the scientific community, has been very most
supportive.
He regards the Cydonia anomalies as a question of the highest order.
Dr. David Webb, a noted space scientist who also served on the President's
Commission on Space publicly urged colleagues to consider the anomalies,
and chided them for timidity. Congressman Robert Roe, formerly head
of the House Committee on Space Exploration, has backed more intense
examination of the area as well.
Hologram Tales: Purely scientific issues aside, if the
Cydonian anomalies do turn out to be artificial, for what purpose
do you think they were put there? Are there any conflicting views
on this question?
RK: Officially, The Mars Project has no opinion on that.
Personally, I don't have much opinion either. It seems fair to assume
that the Face, if artificial, was intended to be seen from space.
Just look at the scale of it! But why would anyone do such a thing?
Religion, a signal to the emerging ape-men on Earth? We cannot possibly
know until we do a return mission, or many such missions.
RP: Our speculation is necessarily limited to our human experience
on Earth. If the anomalies are artificial, their exact meaning and
purpose may be lost to us, much as with Stonehenge. Or they may
reveal to us their secrets through the course of many years of archeological
research.
Hologram Tales: How far do you think the low public perception
of science fiction and its application in this case has hampered
the acceptance of the Cydonian face as an artificial construct?
RK: Is science fiction held in low public esteem? I don't
think it is here in the U.S. But your question actually has several
interesting answers to it. First, what has hurt us has been the
perception that we're sort of tied in with the whole UFO thing.
That's just not true at all, of course. This is not about some fleeting
sighting that cannot be verified or duplicated. It's not even about
something alive today.
It's about some NASA images, and a lot of hard, duplicable science.
But a lot of folks just instantly lump us in with those who talk
about the Greys and all that stuff. Deadly! Beyond that, we've been
severely damaged by an extraordinarily perverse grocery store tabloid
here in the U.S. They're the guys who just recently printed a photo
of a guy in an alien suit walking arm-in-arm with President Bush
- or a celebrity imitator who looks like Bush. You wouldn't think
anyone takes that garbage seriously, and you're right. No one does.
Well this same rag has printed Carlotto's enhancement of the "Face,"
or drawings based on it, about 5 or 6 times now. And every time
they do, they make our work ever so much harder; people lump us
in with stories about World War II bombers found on the moon.
I once gave a talk before a group of scientists - the Bay Area Sceptics
- and I swear they were all holding photocopies of that awful publication
when I walked in! Actually, though, what has been very interesting
to me is that the public has been at least as receptive to us -
maybe more so - than the science fiction community. I can forgive
scientists, you know, just because it is their job to be sceptical
and a little harsh. But SF people, SF writers? My God, what is their
job if not to intrepidly reach out onto the cutting edge? Sure,
going for the cutting edge means running the risk of being cut .
. . but that's the nature of SF, for heaven's sake.
Ray Bradbury - a man I dearly love - wouldn't even look at our materials
until he had the approval of Bruce Murray, former director of JPL
and co-founder of The Planetary Society. Well of course Murray told
him it was all rubbish. Larry Nevin dismissed it as "a trick
of light and shadow and the human inclination to see faces,"
and had no interest whatsoever in Carlotto's papers. I met Jack
Cohen at the 1990 EastCon, in Liverpool. Loved him! A fine, brilliant,
kind man, and one I have developed enormous respect for. Yet I understand
that he fairly ran the other direction when Chris O'Kane of ASTRA
approached him about 'the face' in another convention. Early SF
writers were those crazies, back in the '20s and '30s and '40s,
who thought that nut Goddard really might be onto something with
his rockets. They were the ones who paved the way for public acceptance
of the space race! They prepared us for the dangers as well as opportunities
of a thousand different technologies.
The key thing is, they are still the ones willing to go beyond the
boundaries of accepted norms. Yet on this issue the SF community,
by and large, has been unbelievably gutless. No vision. No courage.
Not even any curiosity, which is perhaps the hardest thing to understand
of all. I have a theory about some of this. I think the entire SF
subculture went for decades yearning desperately for acceptance
by scientists. But for a very long time, the two never really came
together. Serious scientists at UC Berkeley or MIT did not waste
their time on such tripe.
That's changed. NASA accords folks like Bradbury the red carpet
treatment; scientists make up a huge part of SF's following. And
all those SF writers who so yearned for acceptance . . . they will
do nothing to jeopardise that acceptance. In fact, you want to know
what's ironic? You find that real scientists - even if wholly unconvinced
by our work - tend to be more respectful, more interested, in all
of this than established SF writers
Hologram Tales: Well it can all be resolved with more
data. So does the Mars Observer mission next year have the instruments
necessary to prove the Group's case one way or another?
RK: Yes, but we have no real confidence those instruments
will be used to honestly settle the question.
The primary instrument is the wonderful Malin camera. It can provide
images with a fabulous resolution in which one pixel will be about
a yard in size. Compare that with the Viking images, where each
pixel covers - what? - about 150 feet. A thorough examination of
the Cydonia anomalies, taken at two different sun angles (morning
and evening, say) would probably give us something close to a definitive
answer.
But there are, unfortunately, some real problems. The camera is
mounted on the craft with a non-scanning platform. That means that
if you want to target something, you have to shift the entire satellite.
That's hard, hard, hard to do - uses propellant up. But even if
NASA has the best of intentions, we must be prepared for them to
fail to provide the images we want.
RP: And, of course, we don't know that NASA does have the
best of intentions. While we've been told by good scientists that
they believe Dr. Malin himself will try to image the area, we've
also heard that NASA still considers it all a monumental absurdity.
The rumour is they'll just take whatever shots they can, and then
claim to have done the job. If the photos show nothing, well, they'll
say that's what they predicted all along. Even if the photos actually
show some site other than the Cydonia anomalies site.
Hologram Tales: If further satellite missions indicate
the Cydonia face is artificial, how do you think the various space
agencies around the world would respond?
RK: I think the real question is how the public would
respond. The space agencies, needless to say, will go crazy. Mars
will instantly become the focus of all our efforts. NASA will possibly
dump the space station Freedom, a $100-billion boondoggle looking
for a job. Japan and Europe will probably expand their space programs,
as will the Soviets and the U.S. if anarchy or budget problems,
respectively, don't make it impossible. But as for how the public
will respond, well I think Randy can answer that better than I.
RP: Based on public reaction to the anomalies so far, there
will probably be some excitement, but this will be restrained since
we have been amply prepared by the stories of science fiction.
Hologram Tales: If the face does turn out to be artificial,
who would be the top three people with egg on their face?
RK: That's a fun question, but a dangerous one too. Some
of the scientists who so eagerly dismissed this thing are nonetheless
awfully good people. To the extent they'd be "discredited"
it would be a terrible thing for them personally and for all of
us who depend on the scientific community to extend our collective
horizon. Also, you'd be surprised at some of the people who've publicly
attacked this thing and privately supported it in a generous and
decent way. Should they have egg on their face because they didn't
want to endanger their careers?
Sure, there are a few people - rather more minor figures, I think
- who have earned our enmity and will be paid back thoroughly if
the Face proves artificial. But famous people? Larry Niven is the
biggest name that comes to mind. Some of the other SF writers, too.
Bradbury, possibly, which anguishes me because I love the man and
his work dearly; but for him it may not matter, because everyone
will be so happy for him to see a little bit of The Martian Chronicles
appear to come true. Arthur Clarke, I've heard, was just plain unnerved
by the whole thing - too similar to 2001. No disgrace there.
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