Tuesday, December 02, 2008

23 strange places

Slate recently did a story on the censorship of Google Earth. Does the service really obscure our view of Dick Cheney's home? Yes, it does.

That article led me to wonder about other places we are not supposed to see. What else can Google satellite maps uncover? What is covered up?

As you no doubt know, a number of researchers have tracked down some odd things using Google. I've cribbed from the work of others, but I've also added a few findings of my own.

(Note: Some of these links will take you "higher up" than you will want to be. Zoom in, poke around, have fun.)

1. The obvious first stop: Area 51. No saucers visible, alas. Some folks say that the imagery has been changed. Here is an explanation of what you're looking at.

2. Weird massive black triangle near Prince Frederick, Maryland. Does anyone have any idea what this thing is? I'm thinking a water storage facility -- except, you know, it's a triangle. And why do no roads link it to town? (Update: It is indeed a water treatment plant, although even the locals think it is kind of freaky. Here's a ground-level photo.)

3. China Lake Naval Weapons Center. Many locals in the Mojave desert will tell you all sorts of strange tales about the secret experiments that go on out here. You'll see some odd stuff if you zoom in close and explore. This place is bigger than Rhode Island.

4. Rennes-le-Chateau. According to certain Rennes-le-ChaToadies, all of the surrounding landscape features line up with unnerving precision. Perhaps the overhead clues will direct you to the burial place of the lost treasure of Solomon's temple?

5. Helendale, California: Back in the paranoid '90s, buffs would circulate clandestine photographs of very strange, very large objects being tested on a giant platform erected at this facility. Word had it that the tests were to designed to determine radar signatures. The strangest rumors held that the "triangular UFO" craft were tested and/or created here.

6. Inexplicable concentric circles in Nevada -- within the Nellis bombing range, to be exact. If you zoom in and explore, you'll find all sorts of other strange things in the desert here, including lots of odd triangles and more circles, not to mention some "land sculpture" created by the boom-boom.

7. Pine Gap. The NSA's super-secret facility in Australia.

8. Giant Spiderweb in Colorado. This one may take you a while to find. Find County Rd 226 and Harvey Gap Road, then head east down CR 226.

9. Bridge to Nowhere, Lake Baikal (Russia). Actually, I think this is an accidental artifact created by the satellite or aircraft which took the picture. But it sure looks like the money ran out during a massive building project, doesn't it?

10. World's largest Nazi graffiti: If you type in "Nazca, Peru" you won't find the famous ancient pictographs, at least not at first. But you will find some new pictographs on the outskirts of town, which were obviously placed there as a shout out to the Google Earth visitors. Some of these symbols are, um, rather disturbing.

11. Disneylands: Paris, Orange County, Tokyo, Florida (Disney World). The American versions are situated north/south. The French version leans left. (Sweartagod.) The Japanese version goes south-east.

12. Strange gouges in the desert. You'll find other oddities in the vicinity, as well -- including what appears to be a very small, very isolated (military?) complex. You're in Algeria, about a hundred miles away from the Tunisian border. You know: Tatooine.

13. The famous red lake of Iraq.

14. BAR: Why did someone carve these giant letters into the landscape in the middle of Spain?

15. Weird green concentric circles. Not far from the Great Salt Lake in Utah. (Update: This is likely an example of center pivot irrigation.)

16. The spiral. Does anyone know why this was created? It's in New Zealand, near Warkworth.

17. Big red asterisk in a field not too far from Bradford, in England.

18. The meteor crater in Arizona is all fuzzed out, just like Dick Cheney's home. Why?

19. The world's largest ad. Made out of Coke bottles. In Peru.

20. Chalice Well, Glastonbury, England. Supposedly, the Holy Grail is hidden somewhere in these environs. I must confess that the overhead view doesn't seem to offer many clues as to its exact location.

21. An aircraft carrier is docked in a tiny man-made lake outside Shanghai, China. How did they get it in there? It's the ultimate ship-in-a-bottle puzzle! (Update: It only looks like an aircraft carrier. It's actually a school.)

22. The Playboy Mansion -- mysteriously estrogen-free in this view.

23. Finally: California-based aficionados of the odd have long heard and spread rumors about an area roughly 20 miles west of Edwards Air Force Base, in the California desert. A few of you may know about a certain dirt road intersection located in the (and I mean the) middle of nowhere, an intersection marked by an absurd "school bus" sign. This, supposedly, is where the MIBs kidnap interlopers. Local freaks like to tell tales of strange lights, strange noises, underground bases and worse.

I found no indication of these mysteries via Google satellite maps -- although I did discover these circles. (Zoom out for more.) These appear to be crop circles, insofar as something is growing in an area marked out by concentric circles. The right-most circle, or partial circle, seems the most bizarre. Still, I am sure that there is a sensible explanation. There must be. (Update: See #15, above. But the other oddities people have seen here cannot be explained by the wonders of center pivot irrigation.)

19 comments:

Peter of Lone Tree said...

Well gee, Joe, none of the sites are EXACTLY on the 33rd degree of latitude; but....

Peter of Lone Tree said...

Joe, some more interesting "circles" can be found at the "Bellevue, NE" site, home of Offutt AFB. The coordinates are 41 (degrees) 07' 33,83"N
95 (degrees) 52' 58.36"W

Also, Ben Yaakov Airport at
32 (degrees) 59' 24.55"N
035(degrees) 34' 19"E

Anonymous said...

How can Dover Books stay in business with guys like you? And hey, they can't do this on All Things Considered.

Looking up a dentist's location, I got to use Google's Street View today for the first time. What a great service feature! My dog can't wait for them to add the smells.

Anonymous said...

In the end perhaps only the liars will survive. Are we behind on the curve? And which Barac lie would be the best? I never wanted to challenge you and was a long time reader. I really soured after the Obama attacks. Whether it was the devil or mickey mouse running for president, as long as it did not smell like Bush, it had my vote ...Period. Right or wrong. Take care Joe. Buck

Anonymous said...

Did you check out #15 in Street View?

http://tinyurl.com/5op6sf

or preview TinyURL:

http://preview.tinyurl.com/5op6sf

Probably not a contemporaneous POV w/ the Google Earth, but you can see rows. Some rows look like amber waves of grain alternating with waving grains of amber.

Joseph Cannon said...

You know, I should never have written this post. First, it's not political. Second, it wasn't all that popular. Third -- but most important -- I've now become one of those nerdy guys obsessed with Google maps. I really have a lot to do today, but I've been looking up everything from Stonehenge to the Lourdes basilica to the "Motherland" statue in Volgograd (which casts a really weird shadow) to Pitcairn Island to the house of my crazy ex to...

Well, I've also found some more secret stuff. I'll present it in another post. If anyone's interested.

Citizen K said...

Joseph, I'm definitely interested! You prompted my wasting several hours last night looking for answers to your questions which deteriorated into looking up old boyfriend's dwellings on Google Earth. Wow, they've added a lot since I last used it.

#16 The spiral is a "koru" by Auckland artist Virginia King. The idea of it was to "heal the land".
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10338302

Nothing definitive on #14 - BAR - it may mark an actual underground bar:
http://googlesightseeing.com/2005/07/02/bar/

Anonymous said...

This is being typed on a computer monitored by the NSA 24/7. This is my message in a bottle to the world. OBAMA IS THE ANTI CHRIST. Believe it.

Joseph Cannon said...

Huh. Really?

Anonymous said...

I looked around the "Strange gouges in the desert" and found a pool, seriously, this one is very strange:

31.249021, 7.980741

(zoom in to see the strange blue rectangle)

Joseph Cannon said...

Looks like a swimming pool.

Damnedest place for it...

Joseph Cannon said...

strange things in the desert...

31.205923,7.938566

Any ideas..?

Anonymous said...

My favorites are the occasional places where a zoom level of 23 is supported -- like this one, part of a Nat Geo/Google project. Load

13.595061,20.006502

into Google Maps and keep on zooming...

Anonymous said...

OK some rational explanations :

1) The "strange gouges in the desert" are the remains of a dried oasis created by dunes at an old road to probably a pumpstation. Similar dunes can bee seen around as the remnants of holes of the palm trees. Google "Touggourt".

2) the "bridge to nowhere" (Baikal) is probably a scratch on the photography or a badly adapted corner on the picture mosaic.

3) the "bar" sign in Spain is either a mark on the photo or a sign for a pub made by a local dweller. The sign isn't in a "desert" but in a relatively habitated area by a highway. If it's really on the ground it has been made by a guy wanting to sell beer during the annual cycling tour of Spain. Similar marks are found round the Tour de France because people know they wil show up on helicopter covered TV.

4) The Arizona crater isn't "blurred". It's a satellite photo with lower resolution than the adjacent one (check dates on Google Earth)

5) The swastika is obviously a political graffiti done to taunt the right-wing general running for president on the picture besides. Bad job btw, even for aliens.

6) the concentric circles are obviously man made, probably for testing degrees of impact at different distances at the nuclear test range in Nevada.

etc... etc...

All those "inexplicable" shots have a perfectly natural explanation either because they are man-made, natural oddities for which man gives an anthropomorphic "explanation" (like rock looking like an old man at a certain angle and light) or simply defaults on pictures like scratches, annotations etc...

I have a training in interpreting satellite and aerial pictures. If Google Earth pictures were available in stereoscopic version and specially in IR version and with a somewhat higher resolution, everything would be very easy to explain.

But what do I know....

"Anonymous" Frenchie, the country of Cartesius.

Joseph Cannon said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Joseph Cannon said...

Frenchie, I bow to your superior knowledge of aerial photography, though not to your ability to decipher that forbidding and eldritch code known as the English language. You seem to be under the impression that I was suggesting that these oddities were of supernatural origin. I simply thought they were weird -- as in "unusual."

You may have missed it, but I had already suggested your explanation for the Lake Baikal thingie. But I printed the shot anyways, mostly because the result really does look like an amusingly failed public works project.

Beyond that, I just thought that the discussion would be fun.

That said, there really are some odd things in the Algerian desert.

Also in Egypt. There are MASSIVE airstrips and what appear to be military compounds, but nary a car in sight. The places look abandoned.

I hope our own military installations don't look like that after the economy tanks.

Also, I spent quite a long time studying the beaches of St. Tropez, and found not one sunbather. I want a real-time version of this system!

Perry Logan said...

This is one of the great things about the internet. The original post was fun all by itself...and then an expert dropped by, with equally interesting explanations and information. It's a win-win situation. Thank you, Joe and Frenchie!

(But those don't look like photos of earth to me.)

Peter of Lone Tree said...

Okay, Joe. "Unusual?"
Take a look at the ruins of the temple at Baalbek, Lebanon.
(Coordinates 34 25' 26" and 36 12' 16")
To get an idea of the size of some of the stones used in the construction you might have to "search" Baalbek and check out the photographs, but they make the stones of the Pyramids look almost puny.
If any of you physics guys have an idea of how they moved those stones (some at 1500 tons) from the quarry and lifted them into place, let me know.

Anonymous said...

"3. China Lake Naval Weapons Center. Many locals in the Mojave desert will tell you all sorts of strange tales about the secret experiments that go on out here. You'll see some odd stuff if you zoom in close and explore. This place is bigger than Rhode Island."

In google Earth, you can overlay Geological information, like historical earthquake location. When you activate that overlay over the China Lake region, it's amazing. You have about hundred earthquakes all over the region with different dates exactly 1 mile apart in a perfect grid pattern... my craziest theory : it's the signs of the underground explosions required to build the massive underground base there.