Share.

21 Comments

  1. top middle – face
    just beneath and to the right – a frog face
    just below and further to the right – an angry ducky face
    bottom right – flattened Yoda
    I can make shit up too!

  2. The most popular Mars image ever was the Mars Bunny.

    Oh please please NASA show us more pictures of the Mars Bunny!!!!!

    AKA parachute cloth.

  3. About 25 years ago I went to a talk where Richard Hoagland, a former NASA engineer( edit : no formal education beyond high school )wrote a book about the face and I purchased his book out of curiosity.

    As a 20 year old, I was open minded, wanted to believe but it seemed to me like when I stared at my popcorn ceiling and saw faces.

  4. VaguelyArtistic on

    I miss Art Bell. It was like sitting around the campfire listening to weird and scary stories. Mel’s Hole was much more fun than “ANTIFA is everywhere.”

  5. Wasn’t there a story about Carl Sagan wanting the image manipulated to look more human before releasing it to the press?

  6. I think there was a whole X-Files episodes around this image. Funny how colorful and more high resolution images made these dissapear from the limelight.

  7. Anybody who thinks that charlatan Graham Hankock isn’t an outright liar, needs to look into his books about this mountain.

  8. In Futurama, they made a reference to another “structure” on the other side of the planet, the Ass of Mars.

  9. refreshing_username on

    Anyone else remember this showing up on the front page of the National Enquirer in the grocery store checkout line?

  10. To be honest the latest images still show pretty good symmetry. It looks like one side just got blasted by winds and sand storms

  11. I still have the book by Randolfo Rafael Pozos, **The Face on Mars: Evidence for a Lost Civilization?** It was published in 1986, and I think I remember some related article appearing in Analog magazine.

    It’s fantastic (in multiple senses), as he interprets not only a face but also a nearby “city” and a “fort” and pyramids, amphitheater, summer solstice alignment, etc. It runs 155 pages.