Our Moon
Glass Structures on Far Side of Moon
Glass or plasma like structures on far side of the Moon. Photos taken by NASA Apollo 13 mission from two different angles indicating real object and not camera anomalies or reflections. Lunar soils are thought to excellent for making glass and ceramic structures, and because the regolith contains no water which radically degrades glass, it has the structural integrity of steel in a lunar vacuum. According to scientist Paul Spudis, glass made from processed soil could BE the steel for future lunar cities. The glass seen in III162M and other photos to be discussed has already been utilized for this purpose and what we see now are remnants of what use to be. There is enough of it left to be able to discern basic integrity. I have found a zigzag type of foggy haze (glass) ABOVE the horizon directly over a well known Procellarum crater that is certainly not explained within the pages of ANY scientific or lunar paper ever written! Above the upper right horizon one can see a bit of a haze reminiscent of Hoagland’s TOWER seen on III84M. There is also a peculiar looking spire just off the horizon in this area.
The Kepler Rampart has an unusually sharp crater edge with possible structures all around. Located in Oceanus Procellarum, this 33 km Kepler Crater area of the moon has a series of anomalies that suggest bases and mining operations. The talus slope is generally interpreted as partially sorted fragments ranging from dust to large blocks. Copernican era craters such as Kepler are said to have the highest thermal anomalies, deepest floors, and fewest superimposed craters that help indicate age. To the left of the Rampart (west) there are two arched, Quonset looking structures sitting side by side. The double ramparts look constructed, possible for open pit mining.
Lunar Orbiter IV shot a vertical view of Kepler on frame 138. III162M was taken from a 53 km. with a tilt angle at 69 degrees, the principal point of the photo is 1.63 lat. and 41.87 long. Slant distance is 131 km. and the view is looking north-northwest toward Besssarion









