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The Mars mystery : the secret connection…
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The Mars mystery : the secret connection between earth and red planet

by Graham Hancock

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It's interesting enough, but verges on adding one and one to make any number the author dreams up.The amount of hokum science thrown at the most innocuous subjects just serves to prove the point "there are lies, damn lies, and statistics"... ( )
  jonbeckett | Mar 31, 2010 |
Portions of the book are very well done and some interesting facets are pointed out. However, the last part of the book focuses on the risk of asteroids or other stellar bodies impacting the earth, which, to me, takes away from the overall impact of the earlier parts which are based on some gathered evidence rather than pure odds and speculation. ( )
1 vote kawika | Mar 30, 2006 |
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0609802232, Paperback)

Mars holds a special fascination for us, because it is the most Earth-like planet we've yet encountered. As we continue to explore the red planet, geological evidence mounts that long ago water flowed freely across its surface, begging the question: If there was water, was there life? Graham Hancock thinks so. In fact, Hancock, a former journalist and the author of several books, including Fingerprints of the Gods, believes that certain formations on the Martian surface are the remnants of an ancient civilization--one strikingly similar to ancient Egypt--that was destroyed by a cataclysmic deep impact. Further, Hancock claims that NASA's reluctance to give credence to "The Face," "The Pyramids," and other things people see in images of the Martian surface is evidence that the U.S. space agency is motivated by cold war paranoia and mistrust. Hancock seems to be more fair-minded than many NASA critics, stating that, "what we see is a mindset, here, not a conspiracy." And indeed, one is hard-pressed to imagine why NASA isn't agreeing wholeheartedly with Hancock, since his ultimate point is that we should be paying more attention to our planetary neighbors and the skies above, lest we suffer the same fate as the Martians. Hancock raises many intriguing questions in this synthesis of unorthodox Mars theory, but those looking for applications of Ockham's razor had best search elsewhere--Hancock's theories require a leap of faith as surely as NASA's do. --Therese Littleton

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:55:12 -0500)

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