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Iapetus ridge

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Paul Henney

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Jan 3, 2005, 6:26:07 AM1/3/05
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Some RAW images of Iapetus from Cassini

Anyone care to venture as to what this structure is?

http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/raw/raw-images-details.cfm?feiImageID=29630

Paul


Aidan Karley

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Jan 3, 2005, 2:00:09 PM1/3/05
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In article <jZ9Cd.30196$Z7.2...@fe2.news.blueyonder.co.uk>, Paul
Henney wrote:
> Anyone care to venture as to what this structure is?
>
It's the scar of the Cesarean section from which TMA1 was
launched?

"Dave, don't do that."

--
Aidan Karley,
Aberdeen, Scotland,
Location: 57°10'11" N, 02°08'43" W (sub-tropical Aberdeen), 0.021233

pe...@nodrift.com

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Mar 9, 2005, 7:04:25 PM3/9/05
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As I have written on lines 8-11 of the HomePage blurb of my ebook at
www.nodrift.com :

"Saturn's moon Iapetus's equatorial double ridge is a global
bisectional faultline manifestation, due to polar super huge impact.
Martian hemispheric dichotomy genesis is a related phenomenon. So too
Earth's ocean-continent rhythmicity, and the Moon's polar depressions.
Europa's cylindrical double ridges, bands and surface texture are
explained."

pe...@nodrift.com

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Mar 15, 2005, 5:57:37 PM3/15/05
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"Global Bisectional Faultline Manifestations (GLOBIFS) are surface
shock wave collision effects halfway between impacts and antipodal
resonances, impact-antipode wave reinforcement manifestations.
GLOBIFS as prominent as Iapetus's equatorial ridge, Mars'
hemispheric dichotomy, Earth examples, w.2 Slide Show, are as
characteristic of "super huge impact" as flared antipodal
resonances, multiscale "inscription" symmetries and so on of this
ebook . . ." Another quote from Volume w, paper w.2 at www.nodrift.com

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