Faces And Animals On Mars? Pure Pareidolia!
Seeing familiar shapes in clouds is easy especially when you’ve got a handy reference. Credit: Andrew Kirk
image of the “Virgin Mary” appears in the glass of a Tampa, Florida office building on Christmas Day 1996. Credit: Wikipedia
The late planetary scientist and astronomy popularizer Carl Sagan believed pattern-recognition was part of our evolutionary heritage:
“As soon as the infant can see, it recognizes faces, and we now know that this skill is hardwired in our brains,” wrote Sagan. “Those infants who a million years ago were unable to recognize a face smiled back less, were less likely to win the hearts of their parents, and less likely to prosper.”
Maybe it’s simpler than that. Face-recognition is critical because we ultimately need each other for survival not to mention keeping track of the kids in the grocery store. Pattern recognition also helped us find food back in the days of hunting and gathering. The ability to distinguish a particular plant or animal against the background noise meant the difference between a full belly or starvation.
The
infamous Mars Face (left) photographed in comparatively low resolution
by the Viking orbiter in 1976 and a much higher resolution view made by
current Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Credit: NASA
Since pareidolia works best when the stimulus is vague or the object unclear the “face” was perfect. Our brains are more than happy to fill in fictional details. Later photos taken at much lower altitude with higher resolution cameras made the face disappear; in its place we clearly see an eroded mesa. Then there’s the so-called “Bigfoot on Mars,” (an extremely very tiny Bigfoot) and later someone zoomed in on a small rock and said there was a gorilla on Mars. Information equals identity, lack of detail opens the door to anything we might imagine.
Here are 10 examples of imaginary faces and creatures on Mars. The inspiration to write about the topic came from a series of recent “art” images taken with the THEMIS camera on board the Mars Odyssey spacecraft. The probe orbits Mars every 2 hours and carries three science instruments; the camera combines images shot in 5 wavelengths or colors of visual light and 9 in the infrared or heat-emitting part of the spectrum. Others were snapped by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. All are NASA images, and I’ve taken the liberty to colorize several of the black and whites to approximate the appearance of the color images.
Enjoy!
1. My Happy Martian
Martians
obviously have a sense of humor. This 2-mile-wide (3 km) unnamed crater
was photographed in 2008 by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
This
crater chain with its wispy “wings” of impact debris resembles a wasp.
The feature was most likely created when a meteorite arriving it at a
very low angle broke into pieces just before impact.
Lava
flows in Mars’ Elysium Planitia region have left a rather good likeness
of a woolly mammoth or elephant. The region is known for some of the
planet’s youngest lavas – this one may have formed as recently as the
past 100 million years.
I
love these two little hearts. The one on the left is a mesa top
outlined by frost about the size of a football stadium. On the right, a
small impact crater near the tip of the heart blew away dark surface
material exposing lighter soil beneath. Some of the material appears to
have flowed downslope to create the heart.
The
head and long beak of a hummingbird is easy to imagine in this scene. I
can’t say for sure how these features formed but wind and erosion no
doubt played a part.
Martian bird of prey or just another wayward pigeon?
The eroded blankets of ejecta blasted out when these craters formed look like a series of interlocking gears.
Dark sand dune deposits look eerily like a howling wolf.
These dunes remind me of a Minnesota “Thank you” for jump starting your car on a cold winter morning.
Tectonic
stretching of the Martian crust created this unusual right-angle
fracture. I wonder how many other letters of the alphabet we might find
on the Red Planet?
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