On Saturday, November 26, 2011 10:29:39 PM UTC-8, Brad Guth wrote:
GuthVenus, as well as our NASA Magellan Venus and Brad Guth are still being somewhat systematically mainstream shunned or even moderated so as to being excluded from mainstream media and whatever K-12s should get exposed to, as in having been topic/author stalked and otherwise getting subdued by way of continued media exclusion and banishment or simply ignored by some of these more context restrictive search engines like IE Bing, perhaps so as to minimize the public awareness and access to anything contributed by others outside of NASA that are having interesting stuff to say about this extremely nearby planet, as well as for matters of geoengineering and exploiting our moon seem to be getting unstackable in the internet search index status quo, meaning that we have to dig a bit deeper and keep turning over a few more rocks, because our stuff typically isn't sticking anywhere near the top or even kept on the first screen load of whatever the public typically gets to see when they search for anything of planet Venus, GuthVenus or those of our moon exploitation related topics.
This following link is just another passive infomercial example of how others have been gradually reviewing and applying their most conservative logic, physics and common deductive sense as to interpreting the best available science, by allowing for mostly old interpretations to resurface about the extremely nearby planet Venus makes for some relatively failsafe media context that really doesn't tell us all that much, if anything we didn't already know about.
http://www.insidescience.org/content/thirty-year-old-data-offers-new-view-venus/1536
The Firefox or Opera browsers each image-zoom perfectly good enough, though IE or Bing image zooming is a tad worse than either of those or Google Chrome, but that is just another obvious observation that most any 5th grader can easily see and verify for themselves. If you can not use Chrome or some other than IE browser, then perhaps most any basic free photo editing software app will do a whole lot better job than IE (even smartphones and especially iPhone can run photo zooming circles around IE11).
GuthVenus 1:1, plus the 10x resample/enlargement of the
nasa.gov Magellan area of Venus in question
http://bradguth.blogspot.com/2009/07/brad-guth-index.html
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/imgcat/hires/mgn_c115s095_1.gif
It is quite entirely simple enough for even a dysfunctional 5th grader to just zoom to roughly a third up and center of the "mgm_c115s095_1.gif" image, and otherwise with PhotoShop or even most any free digital photo software can offer sufficient editing filters and contrasty dynamic range modifications that'll only help to visualize patterns without actually modifying a damn thing as to the original image. There are fancy photographic editing features and their somewhat complex names as for editing all of this, but basically the the GIF/JPG image formats can be easily zoomed or enlarged to suit, and contrast or sharpness boosted without distorting a damn thing. Some photographic editing doesn't allow for GIF formats, although once converted to JPG it becomes fully doable.
Most adults (even some of our most educated) are simply not capable of doing any of this image interpreting, and forget about the most experienced of our NASA, DARPA, JPL, ASU or even those of our official NIMA/NGA, because they have been entirely worthless if not pathetic from the very get-go.
If you or anyone you happen to know of can better interpret and explain as to what looks so community infrastructure worthy, and thereby better explain those unusual shapes and patterns as something entirely natural, please knock yourself out and tell us, by reporting as to how such natural topography and its active geology plus whatever erosions can manage to pull off any of this highly rational geometric looking pattern stuff. K-12s should go right ahead and ask their teacher(s) to explain it.