View allAll Photos Tagged MARS_32
Anse du Pharo 30/08/2024 19h21
A view over the Anse de Pharo from the gardens of Palais du Pharo with the location below of space invader MARS_32 with the mer Méditerranée in the background.
Marseille
Region: Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur (préfecture)
Département: Bouches-du-Rhône (préfecture)
Canton: Clef-lieu de vingt-cinq cantons
Intercommunalité: Marseille Provence Métropole (siège)
Population: 852,000 (2012), metro 1,720,000 (2011)
Rank: #3 city in France
Density: 3 543 inhab./km2
Coordinates: 43° 17′ 47″ N 5° 22′ 12″ E
Elevation: 0 - 652 meters
This Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) VIS image is of Buvinda Vallis, Mars (32.6oN, 32.6oE), and was collected on the 72683rd orbit of the 2001 Mars Odyssey mission. Buvinda Vallis is >130 km long, and originates in a non-descript pit just east of the volcano Hecates Tholus. It is not clear if this channel was carved by lava, by water, or a combination of these two fluids, but no clear deposits can be identified at the distal end of the channel.
MARS_32 [40 points]
Behind every space invader there is a story of the real space invader fan. I actually still remember most of the space invaders I have found (over 1600 flashed and I guess around 1700 found without being able to flash them because the app did not exist yet). MARS_32 is a special case. From my first hunt I thought it would be on the military marine terrain at the end of the Rue des Catalans. But I really had to look closer to the Palais du Pharo on a small road that leads to a small harbor and workshop. And there it was, after three walks in 2022, 2023 and this summer evening. The view is amazing at this location. The Cathérdrale La Major is in the background.
This space invader is part of the 4th wave of Invader in this city, where he added a whopping 84 new space invaders to the existing 13 from three previous waves (two in 2004, one in 2014) in August 2020.
Onscreen FlashInvaders message: ENJOY THE VIEW
All my photos of MARS_32:
MARS_32 (Close-up, August 2024)
MARS_32 (Wide shot 1, August 2024)
MARS_32 (Wide shot 2, August 2024)
Date of invasion: 09/08/2020 (world wide #3889, wave 4)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
TITLE: Born Under Mars
AUTHOR: John Brunner 1934-94
TYPE: paperback novel
PUBLISHER: Ace
COVER PRICE: $1.50
ISBN: 0-441-07162-7
PAGES: 157
COPYRIGHT: 1967 by author
PUB DATE: September 1977
EDITION: 2nd ACE edition – not listed taken for ISFDB data
COVER ARTIST: Michael Herring - credited
ISFDB: Yes verified not as primary
RATING:
NOTATION:
COMMENTS:
INDEX: 0219 - Born Under Mars - 32 - JB - IB
CONTENTS:
QUOTE “Yew want to know what the reel horror is, hey? Wal, it”s this- it ain’t what thern fish devils haz done, but it’s what they’re a-goin’ to do! They’re a-bringin’ things up aout o’ whar they come from into the taown….ever hear tell of a shoggoth?” p73….. From The Shadow Out of Time by Howard P. Lovecraft
CULPABILITY: All images posted are from publications owned by RC/\Weazel. RC/\Weazel performed image scanning, editing and the compiling of bibliographic data.
ISFDB: Internet Speculative Fiction Data Base.
RATING: On a scale of 1 to 10 with 10 being great and 1 don’t read.
NO entry: indicates specific information not available from book.
MARS_32 [40 points]
Behind every space invader there is a story of the real space invader fan. I actually still remember most of the space invaders I have found (over 1600 flashed and I guess around 1700 found without being able to flash them because the app did not exist yet). MARS_32 is a special case. From my first hunt I thought it would be on the military marine terrain at the end of the Rue des Catalans. But I really had to look closer to the Palais du Pharo on a small road that leads to a small harbor and workshop. And there it was, after three walks in 2022, 2023 and this summer evening. The view is amazing at this location. Palais du Pharo in the background here.
This space invader is part of the 4th wave of Invader in this city, where he added a whopping 84 new space invaders to the existing 13 from three previous waves (two in 2004, one in 2014) in August 2020.
Onscreen FlashInvaders message: ENJOY THE VIEW
All my photos of MARS_32:
MARS_32 (Close-up, August 2024)
MARS_32 (Wide shot 1, August 2024)
MARS_32 (Wide shot 2, August 2024)
Date of invasion: 09/08/2020 (world wide #3889, wave 4)
This THEMIS image captures overlapping lava flows found on the southwest flanks of Alba Mons, Mars (32.23°N, 245.06E). Alba Mons is the broadest volcano on Mars, covering an area approximately 2000km x 3000km, yet is only 6.8 km high (as opposed to Olympus Mons, which is 26 km high). Its slopes are so gentle (0.5°) that you would not realize you were even standing on it. Yet lava flows extend over 1300 km from its summit. This suggests that the lava had very low viscosity.
The long fracture near the bottom of the image is part of a series of fractures that are found around the perimeter of Alba Mons that might have formed during the settling or collapse of the volcano. The depressions within the fracture are collapse pits, suggesting that lava might have flowed through the fracture and formed a lava tube. The pits opened up when the ceiling of the lava tube caved in.
British Summer Time Hyde Park Ft. Bruno Mars + Khalid + DNCE + Cuban Brothers, London, UK - 14th July 2018
Photography by Bimal Tailor