View Full Version : Resource Harvesting - Mining In Our Solar System
Swami Salami
11-27-2008, 11:43 AM
What about this forum, They show images of mining on Mars. Is this true?
http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/forum/lofiversion/index.php/t134324.html
Wow, good find Swami!.....................
Swami Salami
11-27-2008, 12:18 PM
Here's another link about the mining on Mars.
http://keithlaney.net/MiningMars.html
Norval
11-27-2008, 12:20 PM
This is a topic all unto itself. Thanks Swami.
There are hundreds of places on several bodies in our solar system that seem to indicate mining or resource harvesting on a mind boggling very massive scale.
Below is a picture of Ganeymede (sp)
sfth13
11-27-2008, 10:00 PM
I thought this was interesting
"NASA's planned moon base announced last week could pave the way for deeper space exploration to Mars, but one of the biggest beneficiaries may be the terrestrial energy industry.
Nestled among the agency's 200-point mission goals is a proposal to mine the moon for fuel used in fusion reactors -- futuristic power plants that have been demonstrated in proof-of-concept but are likely decades away from commercial deployment.
Helium-3 is considered a safe, environmentally friendly fuel candidate for these generators, and while it is scarce on Earth it is plentiful on the moon."
http://www.wired.com/science/space/news/2006/12/72276
:bananen_smilies070:
Swami Salami
11-27-2008, 11:04 PM
Walking on the moon
Norval
11-28-2008, 10:52 AM
When it comes to going back to the moon, why now after decades?
Why is it I have my doubts about this till after "DISCLOSURE DAY"?
Over the years Gale and I have looked at many thousands of pictures from around our solar
system. That is many thousands out of the hundreds of thousands they have amassed. Where are
the rest of them? Give em up space agencies. We the people on this planet paid for them.
Here is another picture with questionable shapes similar to mountain mining, or is it really water
erosion?
Mars mining
I find Miranda's Chevrons interesting:
₣яэđĸĊ
12-02-2008, 05:55 PM
Helium-3 is considered a safe, environmentally friendly fuel candidate for these generators, and while it is scarce on Earth it is plentiful on the moon."
the recent news stories about the moon, and mining helium perked my ears up, because I did about an 18 month CAD design project on contract for a company called SAIC.
Anyway, several of the hi-flyer type engineers left the project I was on because they were going to work on... mining helium on the moon. This was back in 1990-91.
sfth13
12-02-2008, 06:20 PM
Here are 2 links I found that show what resources there are to mine in our solar system.
http://www.neiu.edu/~jmhemzac/mining_the_moon
http://www.searchanddiscovery.net/documents/2004/schmitt/index.htm#06%20New_Spacecraft*_
:bananen_smilies104:
Norval
12-02-2008, 06:49 PM
Now think on a scale that boggles the mind, a scale of resource harvesting that is so gigantic that the equipment is many miles big. Look at the condition of the destroyed surfaces in our solar system; now think of the necessary resources that it took to build the weapons, defense systems
and maintain them. Look at the destruction and picture in your mind what may have been destroyed that had to be constructed here, or brought here. Remember that the Heavenly New Jerusalem is stated to be one thousand five hundred miles big. Most all, if not all discovered so far, of the smaller moons, say a thousand miles and smaller, are utterly destroyed by bombardment of some kind.
Just a bit of food for thought.
sfth13
12-02-2008, 07:10 PM
maybe i'm reaching here but are you talking about all moons being some type of craft... I think John Lear said that he thinks our moon was towed here.. that would make sense that all of the photo's of the craterchains are on moons.. sort of like the death star in star wars...this does boggle the mind
Hoagland has a good article about Iapetus: A Moon with a View
A Moon with a View (http://www.enterprisemission.com/moon1.htm)
sfth13
12-02-2008, 07:35 PM
Thanks for the link Gale... I'm half way through with Dark Mission... i think my brain is going to pop. :helpsmilie:
Heretic
12-02-2008, 09:11 PM
I have seen the moon towing theory represented in many written works, insider testimony, and contactee reports. I have also read that some alien technology has the capability to change the orbit of planets and not the "drag it" variety. If tractor beams are on TV, what do they have? Something tells me this is a reality and that solar systems are gardens to those endowed with cosmic creativity.
Which begs me to wonder who is really doing the strip mining on the planets and moons of our neighborhood. Even the Star Trek technology of phasers and transporters removes the need for heavy equipment. Only a people who dont have such technology would need that equipment. There could be more but I see three possibilities:
We do have undisclosed neighbors who also rely on strip mining.
They are put there for us to see, as a part of a cosmic induction process.
We are striping mining the planets and moons.
Are there anymore?
:hammer::hammer::hammer:
Norval
12-03-2008, 07:49 AM
The five words of a world famous lunar scientist said so much to me.
"The moon is our friend."
Why would it have to be towed?
I think it is fully capable of self propulsion.
Many legends tell of the moon going and coming, and not being where it should have been. Also strange tidal actions recorded too says much.
Even the Star Trek technology of phasers and transporters removes the need for heavy equipment. Only a people who dont have such technology would need that equipment.
How so?
Heretic
12-03-2008, 08:03 AM
How so?
Well I assume there are plasma, particle beam, high energy laser/maser, and destructive technology that could easily break apart rock, ore and other element without the need for local explosives.
The star trek type transporters, technological teleportation devices, tractor beams, materialization/de-materialization technologies, molecular manipulation and transfer type tech is evident in many alien abduction case studies where solid objects go through glass, wood, or who knows.
Seems to me it would just be easier to blow the stuff up a little from above to break it up into smaller chunks, and then simply whisk it away on your mining starships without ever having to set foot on the ground.
sfth13
12-03-2008, 08:07 AM
I didn't know we had so many moons in our solar system... check out this list
http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/our_solar_system/moons_table.html
Norval
12-08-2008, 08:07 AM
Heretic,
Yes, I would have to agree with you up to a certain point and then I still have to ask, how big are those "mining star ships" would you guess at? Considering all the fighting that these bad ETs did in the past, our mythological accounts of their fighting, wars, battles and so on, wouldn't that take a hell of alot of resources? What can be easily seen in many photos of the moons are odd unexplainable (to my satisfaction at least) markings. Very few have investigated these strange landscapes from the view point that Gale and I have considering them to be signs of ETs. That is except for secret government "think tanks".
Sfth13,
There are quite a few, and most of them look like someone drove them through the asteroid belt, yet that wouldn't do the kind of damage we see on them, so what did all that damage?
http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/jpegMod/PIA03878_modest.jpg
The spots and pits visible in this region of Europa's northern hemisphere are each about 10 kilometers (6 miles) across. The dark spots are called "lenticulae," the Latin term for freckles.
unipax
12-08-2008, 11:47 AM
Well I assume there are plasma, particle beam, high energy laser/maser, and destructive technology that could easily break apart rock, ore and other element without the need for local explosives.
The star trek type transporters, technological teleportation devices, tractor beams, materialization/de-materialization technologies, molecular manipulation and transfer type tech is evident in many alien abduction case studies where solid objects go through glass, wood, or who knows.
Seems to me it would just be easier to blow the stuff up a little from above to break it up into smaller chunks, and then simply whisk it away on your mining starships without ever having to set foot on the ground.
now we're talkin
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