A while back I posted a couple threads at Alpha Tango Spooks:
Thread 1:
What Gives In Cetus? Google Sky Coordinates 2 26 33 -04 41 37
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread640376/pg1
The following is from that OP:
So I decided to do a little background reading on Sumerian mythology this evening. I started looking in the usual place: Wikipedia. reading through the main article I clicked on the link for Nammu, the Sumerian creation goddess. Reading through this article I found that Nammu was "probably the first personification of the constellation called Tiamat..." what the Greeks called..."Cetus."
Linking on Cetus I started reading through the article and discovered that "Cetus lies far from the galactic plane, so that many distant galaxies are visible, unobscured by dust from the Milky Way. Of these, the brightest is Messier 77 (NGC 1068), a 9th magnitude spiral galaxy near ? Ceti. Recently, the galactic cluster JKCS 041 was confirmed to be the most distant cluster of galaxies yet discovered.[1]"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Mesopotamian_religion
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nammu
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cetus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JKCS_041
So, being curious, I opened Google Earth and went to Google Sky to take a look at the most distant galaxy clusters we've discovered. While navigating around the area I came upon a "line of stars" extending horizontally through Cetus, and intersectected by a similar vertical "line of stars"
I've drawn red lines in Google earth/sky and posted the picture below.
You may find the point of origin for my cursory Google Earth tour at these coordintes:
2 26 33 -04 41 37
Pan back slightly and you'll see the lines I'm referring to.
Question: What are these.
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/390d509d4d09_zpsc0b730bd.jpg)
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/80180929186e_zps7663a6f0.jpg)
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________
And that thread led me to another anomaly that I addressed here:
Thread 2:
Wikisky.org DSS2 Anomaly Coordinates 02 22 40.68, -07 16 19.2
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread642991/pg1
I followed the vertical line all the way to it's apparent end and found this at Wikiksky.org "DSS2" Survey coordinates 02 22 40.68 -07 16 19.2.
What the deuce?!
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/208332c013f9_zpse3927a08.jpg)
And some processed captures:
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/ba40961846751_zps2a326527.jpg)
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/07f254e99ce9_zpsa7c039e3.jpg)
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/551e94fd99b9_zps0d8566d2.jpg)
Space Station?
Stargate?
Interesting stuff...
Quote from: this_is_who_we_are on August 30, 2014, 05:53:48 PM
Space Station?
Stargate?
Interesting stuff...
Very interesting stuff, gold for you. 8)
Looking forward to hearing from others.
I was interested to know what stars are 72 light years away, and surprisingly the only one on the list is BD-05 138, in Cetus. The star may be a member of the Hyades stellar moving group. (http://www.solstation.com/stars3/100-gs.htm#70-80)
As a side-note, I find it interesting that Hyades is similar to Hades.
Why was I interested only in stars 72 light years away? Call it a hunch.
Anyway, 13 light years away from BD-05 138 I found "BE Ceti", a yellow-orange star like our Sun, about 66.5 light-years distant from us. (http://www.solstation.com/stars3/be-ceti.htm). You could say it's 66.6 light years away. In Cetus. Which takes it's name from a sea monster in Greek mythology. A beast rising from the sea 66.6 light years away as it were.
Conclusions: I have none. But my Spidy-sense says something is of interest here.
Speculations: Perhaps we came here, from there: 72 light years away, a long time ago. And what we have left are distant, distorted histories that have been passed down through the millennia, leaving us with certain mythologies and references to certain numbers like 13, 72, and 666.
And still the question remains - what the hell is that thing I found in Cetus anyway. It's not natural.
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/07f254e99ce9_zpsa7c039e3.jpg)
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/551e94fd99b9_zps0d8566d2.jpg)
But then again, it's not exactly in the smae area of Cetus as these other stars I've just brought up, but... there's a mystery here.
It looks a little like a JPEG artefact, but not much.
Interesting. :)
Quote from: ArMaP on July 25, 2015, 02:01:14 PM
It looks a little like a JPEG artefact, but not much.
Interesting. :)
Yeah, I thought of that too way back in the original Spookz thread:
QuoteDoc: "I apologize for the crudity of this model but I just..."
Marty: "Yeah, I know, Doc. It's not to scale. It's okay, Doc."
Doc: "All right."
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/95c48ed0604f_zpscdotocol.jpg) (http://s1056.photobucket.com/user/this_is_who_we_are/media/95c48ed0604f_zpscdotocol.jpg.html)
What the deuce?
Pixelation? Looks kind of odd for pixelation. Looks like 8 orbs in a circular pattern with a bright orb on the circumference (right hand side)
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread640376/pg1
i was so interested in this I even emailed the Keck Observatory with my "find" asking them what they made of it, expecting no response. And, of course, that's what I received. No response.
I did, however, get a poster on the thread describing my crudely conceived illustration as looking like a fried egg.
Bitch Slap that fried egg guy there is no cure for stupid :P
IF real it is and not an image artifact... Class 5 Civilization found you have! ~ Yoda
(http://maybusher.com/fckeditor/editor/filemanager/connectors/aspx/pics/BlogPics/image/dyson_sphere.gif)
(http://www.trekmate.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/dyson-sphere-140114c-021.jpg)
A Dyson ring — the simplest form of the Dyson swarm — to scale. Orbit is 1 AU in radius, collectors are 1.0×107 km in diameter (~25× the Earth–Moon distance), spaced 3 degrees from center to center around the orbital circle.
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f7/Dyson_Ring.PNG/800px-Dyson_Ring.PNG)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyson_sphere
Well, I have used your Google Sky coords. and thus far, I cannot gin up anything that looks like what you have posted. I will keep trying to find it! :)
Quote from: rdunk on July 26, 2015, 02:21:47 AM
Well, I have used your Google Sky coords. and thus far, I cannot gin up anything that looks like what you have posted. I will keep trying to find it! :)
It doesn't show up on Google Sky. I had originally found it using the interactive map at www.wikisky.org, using the DSS2 survey. I have a screenshot from the original Alpha Tango Spookz thread:
(http://i1056.photobucket.com/albums/t376/this_is_who_we_are/eb24b1a063f6_zpssjv7pfwe.jpg) (http://s1056.photobucket.com/user/this_is_who_we_are/media/eb24b1a063f6_zpssjv7pfwe.jpg.html)
02 22 41.94 -07 16 23.3http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread642991/pg1
Unfortunately wikisky.org seems to not be loading...
hmm.
wikiskysky.org is down for this Mac Pro also.
Good Stuff, as usual, Brother Bill. ;)
Quote from: thorfourwinds on July 26, 2015, 04:16:56 AM
wikiskysky.org is down for this Mac Pro also.
Good Stuff, as usual, Brother Bill. ;)
Thanks!
:)
It's working for me, at least now.
Here (http://www.wikisky.org/?ra=2.3779230485773457&de=-7.272643815759359&zoom=14&show_grid=1&show_constellation_lines=1&show_constellation_boundaries=1&show_const_names=0&show_galaxies=1&img_source=DSS2)'s the link for that area.
Quote from: ArMaP on July 26, 2015, 12:32:03 PM
It's working for me, at least now.
Here (http://www.wikisky.org/?ra=2.3779230485773457&de=-7.272643815759359&zoom=14&show_grid=1&show_constellation_lines=1&show_constellation_boundaries=1&show_const_names=0&show_galaxies=1&img_source=DSS2)'s the link for that area.
Thanks for the heads up. It's working for me now as well. And there's "the thing".
And if you pan out a bit you'll see, as I described in the OP at the original thread, how I arrived at these co-ordinates: I saw a number of "lines" and followed them in the interactive sky survey to their ends. At the end of this line I found "The Thing".
I had originally made a thread about these "lines", but then I found "The Thing", and posted a second thread devoted to "It".
So there you have it: unexplained lines (I don't think they are stitch lines), and a seemingly unnatural object at the end of one of them.
You can see why it piqued my interest.
A diagonal line? Or something else?
very interesting, TIWWA: A Dyson Sphere relatively close by? shades of Ringworld and much food for thought...
it would be interesting to see if the Hubble has taken any detailed shots of this area in question...
seeker
Quote from: the seeker on July 27, 2015, 03:29:04 AM
very interesting, TIWWA: A Dyson Sphere relatively close by? shades of Ringworld and much food for thought...
it would be interesting to see if the Hubble has taken any detailed shots of this area in question...
seeker
Seems the DSS and DSS 2 are... "based on photographic data obtained using the Oschin Schmidt Telescope on Palomar Mountain and the UK Schmidt Telescope."
http://archive.eso.org/dss/dss
There are Hubble images of Cetus online though: http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/search.php?query=cetus&x=0&y=0
I'll look around and see if I can find a way to search them using coordinates.