Working with the large scale UK Ordnance Survey map of the region, I then carefully measured the two sets of items in question and found them to be stunningly proportionate. Silbury Hill, part of the Avebury complex (north of Stonehenge, England) Avebury Circle, part of the Avebury complex (north of Stonehenge, England)īack in 1991 it occurred to me that Avebury circle, (see figure 5) with its earthen rampart and ditch, is a depiction of the Cydonia crater on Mars, suggesting that Silbury Hill (figure 6 below) – along with other features in the area – might be an analog model or 'mirror' representation of the key features of Cydonia.įigure 6. For the force that is sharpening one face will at the same time be causing any existing opposite straight sides or edges to erode.įigure 5. As Erol Torun, a geomorphologist at the American Defense Mapping Agency has stressed, an object with five straight sides cannot be formed, or at any rate cannot be maintained, by the action of wind and weather. Located to the south east of the City is a large five-sided pyramid (known as the D&M pyramid, see figure 4 above). The five-sided D&M pyramid (Viking image 1976)
This spiral mound is a mile in diameter and is approximately 500 feet high.ĭue west of this mound is a cluster of what seem to be mainly pyramidal structures, one of which has obviously been damaged. South of the crater is a mound (see figure 2), which has an apparent anti-clockwise spiral ascending it with a pyramidal structure on its peak. On the crater rim there is what appears to be a three-sided or tetrahedral pyramid. In other words, the existence of the wall must post date the laying down of the blanket. The Wall clearly sits on top of the ejecta blanket. The Cydonia Crater and Wall (Viking image 1976)įigure 3 is a close up of the Cydonia crater and the Wall, the latter some two miles long and remarkably straight. The Cydonia Complex, Mars (Viking images 1976)įigure 3. There is an apparent correspondence between the complex where the Face is to be found on Cydonia, Mars – located at 41°N latitude – (see figures 1 above & 2 below) and the Avebury earthen rampart and ditch circle complex, just north of Stonehenge, England.įigure 2. We are now going to consider the region of the planet known as Cydonia and there the absolutely remarkable is found in great abundance.
![the face of mars coordinates the face of mars coordinates](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/vEJBXZ07gF0/maxresdefault.jpg)
During July 1976 the Viking orbiter began sending back detailed pictures of the planet's surface.įigure 1. In August 1975 NASA launched the Viking space probe to the red planet. How this discovery was originally made in 1991 is recorded here in the first part of the Two-Thirds Preface.Īn increasing number of people are becoming aware of the 'Face' on Mars. The stunning terrain correspondences between Avebury, the World Heritage site in Wiltshire UK, and the Cydonia complex on Mars.