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What’s Cydonia?

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In 1976, NASA’s Orbiter spacecraft took pictures of the Martian desert, including an area called Cydonia, which contains pyramid-shaped features and a humanoid face. While NASA dismissed the possibility of artificial features, some researchers found mathematical consistencies and evidence of an underground city. Enterprise, founded by Richard Hoagland, hosts an open-source research project on Cydonia. The proposed new physics involves higher dimensional energies and a new source of unlimited energy. In 2002, Odyssey mapped Mars with THEMIS, revealing evidence of an underground city beneath the Cydonia dust. Many await NASA’s official investigation of the area.

On July 20, 1976 NASA’s Orbiter spacecraft descended just 1,000 feet (300 meters) above the nearly airless Martian desert to take unprecedented pictures of the planet, snapping images of an area called Cydonia.

Cydonia is primarily known for a feature contained in those images in frame 35A72, known as the Face. This feature is one mile (1.6 kilometers) long and rises 1,500 feet (457 meters) above the Martian desert. It resembles a humanoid face, sphinx-like in appearance.

Cydonia also contains other interesting characteristics that have attracted the attention of some researchers and some scientists. Most of these features are pyramid shaped and two of these, one considered the D&M pyramid, are 5 sided. The features seemed man-made to some and resemble ancient architecture found on Earth.

NASA’s position on Cydonia was that images of the area only show natural features and plays of light. Most of the scientific community agrees. Indeed, once the Face hit the covers of tabloids, paying Cydonia to any scientific mastermind attracted ridicule to the max.

However, Richard Hoagland, Erol Torun and a handful of others quietly worked on the images in their spare time, trying to eliminate the possibility that the features were artificial. Instead, to their own surprise, every avenue of attack was answered with unexpected results that raised more questions than they answered. Mathematical consistencies such as the repetition of a 19.5° angle permeate the geometric configuration of area along with other synchronous mathematical relationships, not only within Cydonia itself, but also in relation to the constellations and even the pyramids of Gizeh on Earth.

The scientific community has dismissed the continued research out of hand. However, while aspects of it were highly speculative, a fundamental mathematical consistency was becoming increasingly curious.
Hoagland recorded the findings in a book, The Monuments of Mars: A City on the Edge of Forever and founded Enterprise which hosts an “open-source” research project on Cydonia. Here Hoagland and his team publish NASA images of the area with their personal research data. While the tenor of the site is likely freewheeling, the open nature of the Enterprise is grounded in science‘s primary tenant: the ability to challenge another’s work to independently disprove it or corroborate findings.

Over the past two decades Hoagland and others have “decoded” what they believe to be a mathematical message from hyperdimensional physics encoded in Cydonia. This proposed new physics involves higher dimensional energies, control of gravitational forces, and a new source of free unlimited energy. The source of this “hyperdimensional energy gateway” feeds into our 3D world and is related to figure 19.5, which represents an intersection point in the geometric shape of a tetrahedron or pyramid, within a sphere. Superimposed on a planet with a vertex at either pole of rotation, this corresponds to approximately 19.5° above or below the equator.
Hoagland points out that there is evidence of this 19.5° energy source on every planet, from Jupiter’s Great Red Spot, to Saturn’s storms, the Great Dark Spot on Uranus, Mons Olympus on Mars, our Hawaiian volcanoes, etc.
In 2002, another significant chapter in Cydonia research opened when Odyssey mapped Mars with the Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS). THEMIS combines infrared and visual imaging systems for a unique look at topography and heat distribution. Enterprise engaged the services of two independent imaging experts, Holger Isenberg and Keith Laney, to study and refine the images by working with different filters to reveal any additional detail in the area. Holger and Laney worked independently to see if their eventual results would duplicate or not.

What Laney initially found was “noise” in the images in terms of a “blockage” that could not be filtered out, but eventually he realized that the blockage was not noise but evidence of what appeared to be an underground city beneath the Cydonia dust . It is assumed that the city is buried under a sheet of ice which is itself covered by a thin layer of dust.
Holger did not find this “noise”. It was later discovered that their original images differed, although both were downloaded from THEMIS. Holger’s image has been altered to be inferior. You can see infrared images of Cydonia, the “city” below, and read the saga of the images (and THEMIS answers to Enterprise questions) about Enterprise.

For over a quarter of a century Cydonia has fascinated, intrigued and compelled many. While many anomalous researchers were and are convinced by the 2002 THEMIS image that a city does indeed lie beneath the dusty surface, most await NASA to officially investigate the area. Until then, Cydonia calls.

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