Quote:
Originally Posted by Dantheman62
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Folks, I suggest that you do your research.
Jan Lamprecht discusses every photo he could get his hands on.
This photo is Nasa’s ESSA 7 photograph taken November 23, 1968. I’ll quote Jan.
“When Hollow Earthers in the 1960’s first presented this satellite photo as evidence they stated that the Earth’s Polar Holes were covered by fog and mist. These ideas were borrowed directly from Marshall Gardner and others earlier. They believed that the hot air from the tropical Inner Earth caused a constant fog in the polar regions. They argued that one could not see this Polar Hole most of the time because of the fog which covered the polar regions and which was impossible to tell from the clouds and snow in the region.
“This photo, so they said, represented one of those exceptional days when the fog cleared and, for a short time, one could look into the vast chasm leading into the Earth. The black region is where the Earth curves inwards and the Sun cannot shine into it.
“NASA’s explanation for this photograph is that it is a montage of photographs taken over a period of time.
“So who is right?
“The real key to this photograph lies in recognizing that
there is no night side in this photograph. Here one is looking down on the Earth from the North Pole and the equator lies on the out edges of the photograph. The Earth is inclined to its orbit by 23.5 degrees and so the Arctic regions can have 24 hours of sunlight in mid-summer. I don’t know when this “photo” was taken so one could perhaps have argued that it was taken in mid-summer. But, the Earth is only tilted by 23.5 degrees, and so 24 hours of sun-light can only exist within the Artic circle. In this photo
we can see the sunlight regions stretching down to the equator. This is clearly an impossibility. The only valid explanation therefore is NASA’s. (end quote.)
Sorry. I agree with Jan.
You'll have to read his book about many of the other interesting photos.