AUTHOR(S)

Courtney Brown

ABSTRACT

An extensive remote-viewing study was conducted at The Farsight Institute in March 2010 to investigate an anomalous high resolution image of Mars that suggests artificiality. The study involves nine highly trained remote viewers across four remote-viewing methodologies, all methodologies of which are directly or indirectly derived from remote-viewing methodologies used by the United States military forces. The image that constitutes the target of the remote viewing suggests that a spray or fountain of liquid is being discharged from a long tubular nozzle, which in turn is connected to an apparent pipeline that leads to a dome formation. There is another larger dome formation nearby that is also part of the target. The remote-viewing sessions are evaluated with respect to verifiable target qualities as determined by the target image. This study notes a high degree of correlation between obvious target characteristics as determined by the target image and the detailed remote-viewing data. In the aggregate, this study offers strong support for the idea that the spray and the two dome formations deviate from known geological processes, and thus may be artificial. The remote-viewing data also shed some light on possible current activities and/or processes that may be taking place at this location on Mars.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)

Brown, Courtney, Ph.D., is a professor at Emory University who specializes in the application of nonlinear mathematical models to social and political phenomena. Independent of his work as a professor, he is the Director and founder of The Farsight Institute (www.farsight.org), a nonprofit research and educational organization dedicated to the study of nonlocal anomalistic consciousness. He has published a number of books on the subject of remote viewing. Web sites: www.courtneybrown.com www.farsight.org.

NOTES

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http://www.scientificexploration.org/talks/29th_annual/29th_annual_brown_remote_viewing_mars.html