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i know it's not on course to hit us, it crosses mars' orbit, not ours. but it seems a lot like the asteroid that was mentioned in a movie from tom corbett's universe. the movie is significant b/c it touched upon a lot of the issues that have come to light lately, basically it's about artifacts found thru out our solar system, including ruins on mars (that actually resemble the "face") and on our moon, (i'll try to find the pic). it states that there is an asteroid that was once part of a planet that once was in what is now the asteroid belt and contains an entrance into the asteroid that revealed "the hall of records." funny thing about that is eros is the asteroid nasa felt a need to go visit and took a picture of what might be the entrance, and eros comes closest to earth in the year 2012. the movie which was out in the early forties is remarkably dead on to what is going on today, and it also adressed ppl slowly and carefully to the presence of aliens.
http://www.enterprisemission.com/corbett.htm

2007-04-06 04:02:00 · 2 answers · asked by free thinker 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

2 answers

we have no reason to fear asteroid eros, as you said it will cross mars not us. the whole idea of the possible entry way into the asteroid is quite intriguing but the picture of the "entrance" is highly subjective but appealing, it does seem to be highly symetric which is undoubtedly unusual. there does appear to be way to many "coincidental" things associated w/ the various things you mentioned for there to be nothing of interest going on. where there's smoke there's fire. and all the people on here who say it couldn't be possible are the same people who would have said the earth was flat, and actually meant it.

2007-04-06 09:47:28 · answer #1 · answered by scauma 2 · 0 0

I wouldn't fear it. we had a probe (NEAR) orbit it and actually land on it and there wasn't anything strange about it. We went there because it was big enough to orbit. There is no hall of records; that's sci-fi. Please join us in the 21st century.

http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/near.html

2007-04-06 11:10:23 · answer #2 · answered by Gene 7 · 1 0

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