Friday, December 7, 2018

Mars Lander InSight Faked; Landed On A Bakken Oil Pad -- December 7, 2018

I knew it! I knew it!

The recent Mars landing was faked. Mars InSight did not land on Mars. It landed on a large Bakken oil pad. The pad has been staked and covered with "scoria." The oil company has not yet started drilling.

From this site:
Everyone who has traveled through western North Dakota has noticed the colorful reddish layers and brick-like masses of baked and fused clay, shale, and sandstone that color and shape the landscape
These baked materials, known as clinker (or locally as "scoria"), formed in areas where seams of lignite coal burned, producing heat that baked the nearby sediments to a form of natural brick. Clinker beds typically range from a few feet to 50 feet or so thick in western North Dakota, but much thicker beds are found in Wyoming and Montana.
This is the video of Mars InSight landing on the oil pad about 23 miles northeast of Williston. There are several hints that prove this is in North Dakota. See if you can spot them.

Mars InSight Lands In The Bakken

Obviously the wind was the big giveaway. That is "North Dakota wind." North Dakota wind has its own "fingerprint." UND School of Meteorology catalogues winds from throughout the universe and the "wind" in this video has the North Dakota Wind Fingerprint, #UN.SS.EA.NA.ND.WD.3891092.

Other hints: there are no trees. None. There are only one or two places where there are no trees within NASA's landers, and one of them is North Dakota.

Second: how did the camera crew arrive on Mars to take video of the InSight landing? Impossible. No, the cameramen were on a huge wind tower near Tioga.

Third: in the far distance, on the horizon, starting at 41 seconds one can see a farm house and two out-buildings that are clearly the old Manger homestead near Epping.

Finally, and most convincing, other than the constant wind, there were no clouds. From "Home on the Range:
  • oh, give me a home
  • where the buffalo roam, where the deer and the antelope play;
  • where seldom is heard a discouraging word,
  • and the sky is not cloudy all day
Yeah, I know. You're asking, "So, where are the buffalo and the deer and the antelope?"

Well, you don't see sage grouse either, do you. They're nocturnal. 

Huge "thanks" to a reader who brought this to my attention.

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