Upcoming NASA Missions Back to Mars...
and NASA's Plans and Policy Relating to Cydonia
NASA "Micro-Fossil" Press Conference
(August 7, 1996)
Question:
"Regarding your assertion that you wanted to 'relook' at the
priorities for the upcoming Mars missions -- there is a group of scientists,
headed by Dr. Stanley McDaniel (sic), that has been asking NASA for some
number of years now to rephotograph the Cydonia land forms ['the Face'
and 'pyramids'] at a high resolution, and to make this 'rephotography'
on the list of top priorities for photographing the Mars surface. In view
of the findings announced today, I'm wondering what you would be saying
[today] about this question of rephotographing the Cydonia land forms
at high resolution... top priority... and in 'real' time."
Answer -- from Dan Goldin, NASA Administrator:

"There can only be so many 'top priorities,' and if everything is #1 priority
we'll never get there. We have a much higher-resolution capability with
this mission, and I'll ask Wes [Huntress, Associate NASA Administrator
for Space Science] to handle the details. We have the mission planned
and targeted, and if we have an opportunity to get a picture of what some
people think is a Face on Mars' and could have been prior -- not single-celled
life but a higher level of life--; if we have a chance to get a
higher-resolution picture to see what that is, we will do that. Let me
ask Dr. Huntress to talk about our approach."
Answer -- Dr. Wes Huntress, Associate NASA
Administrator for Space Science:

"You have to remember that what we are talking about today -- and let
me just repeat -- is only potential evidence for early, very microbial
life on this planet, not of higher order forms of life later in the history
of the planet. So -- there's no direct bearing on whether or not this
formation ['the Face'] is the result of civilizations on Mars -- as some
would like to believe... ([in spite of the fact that] the great majority
of the science community believe that's not the case). But, in addition
to the lander we're sending later this year [Mars Pathfinder], were also
sending an orbiter [Mars Global Surveyor] to begin the geological mapping
of the planet in order to, in fact, look for the best places on the planet
where we would find evidence of early life on this planet. And we will,
in fact, be getting some fairly high-resolution images of various portions
of the planet. Now this [Cydonia] region is NOT a particular target [of
Surveyor, or Pathfinder]. But if there is an opportunity to rephotograph
it, we certainly will; we're certainly going to get better pictures
of it than we got last time... [emphasis added]."
NASA Administrator Goldin's "philosophical reflections" on the meaning of the August 7 NASA
announcement of the "Martian micro-fossil" (Discovery Channel -- September 29, 1996):
|
"After that press conference, I wasn't tired; I
wasn't nervous. I was excited. So much adrenalin flowed, that I
excused myself... went to my office and I shut the door and I sat
there -- blinds closed for a half hour -- contemplating the impact
that this could have on who we think we are..."
|
Carl Sagan, Cornell University -- on CNN WORLD VIEW,
August 6, 1996 -- the day before the NASA Press Announcement:

"The chance of independently arriving [at]... the same kind of life [as
NASA has researched] on two independent planets is very small.
And that is one of the great excitements -- to see what two different
planets [evolve]... how their evolutionary history proceeds. The discovery,
if confirmed, is a glorious discovery: it suggests not just life on two
planets in one paltry solar system... but that the process is very general...
and that life must exist on [the planets of] billions of
stars in the Milky Way Galaxy... [emphasis added]."
What was that we said in "Monuments," now so many years ago . . ?
"...if the colonists' of Mars didn't come from Earth... we are
left with only one reasonable alternative--
"The stars themselves..."
-- Richard C. Hoagland, "The Monuments of Mars" (1987)
And what did Carl Sagan say just recently, specifically about "Cydonia" . . ?
"...these features merit closer attention with higher
resolution. Much more detailed photos of the 'Face' would surely
settle issues of symmetry and help resolve the debate between geology
and monumental sculpture. Small impact craters found on or near the
Face can settle the question of its age. In the case (most unlikely
in my view) that the nearby structures were really once a city, that
fact should also be obvious on closer examination. Are there broken
streets? Crenelations in the "fort"? Ziggurats, towers, columned temples,
monumental statuary. Immense frescoes? Or just rocks?
"Even if these claims are extremely improbable -- as
I think they are -- they are worth examining...
"Unlike the UFO phenomenon, we have here the opportunity
for a definitive experiment. This kind of hypothesis is falsifiable,
a property that brings it well into the scientific arena.
"I [therefore] hope that forthcoming American and
Russian missions to Mars, especially orbiters with high-resolution
television cameras, will make a special effort -- among hundreds
of other scientific questions -- to look much more closely at the pyramids
and what some people call the Face and the city [emphasis added]..."
-- Carl Sagan, "The Demon-Haunted World" (1995)
And, if they do -- and Cydonia is resoundingly confirmed
(and we all get to know...) -- where will Dan Goldin go to meditate
on that one?
|
|
|