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Created page with "thumb|The undeniable proof! Flat Earthers claim that photos taken by NASA's rovers from the surface of Mars are actually photos taken from various locations on Earth. This claim is propagated on social media through shitty memes<ref group=note>Becuase flerfs can't ever point to a primary source</ref> that usually show two nearly identical photos side by side, with one claimed to be Mars and the ot..."
 
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Of course, NASA has never shared a photo taken on Earth and claimed it to be Mars.
Of course, NASA has never shared a photo taken on Earth and claimed it to be Mars.
==Specific examples==
===Devon Island #1===
[[File:Devon island.jpeg|thumb|Devon Island #1]]
====Origin====
The original photo is the the first colour image from NASA's [[Wikipedia:Viking 2|Viking 2]] lander, taken on September 5, 1976.<ref>[https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/images/pia00568-first-color-image-of-the-viking-lander-2-site/ "First Color Image of the Viking Lander 2 Site" Jet Propulsion Laboratory]</ref> The [[Wikipedia:Viking program|Viking program]] was NASA's first mission to land a payload on Mars' surface.
====Manipulated photo====
The manipulated photo appears to have originated from [https://ufologie.patrickgross.org/htm/marscol3.htm this website], where the author turns down the red saturation in NASA's photo. The author hypothesises that the photos of Mars from Viking may have been overly red-saturated and not quite in true colour, so they provide the manipulated photo as a possible alternative for what the Martian surface really looks like.


==Notes==
==Notes==

Revision as of 09:53, 20 May 2026

The undeniable proof!

Flat Earthers claim that photos taken by NASA's rovers from the surface of Mars are actually photos taken from various locations on Earth. This claim is propagated on social media through shitty memes[note 1] that usually show two nearly identical photos side by side, with one claimed to be Mars and the other, some location on Earth.[1][2] According to flerfs, this is evidence that NASA is using their multi-billion dollar budget wisely by hiring an amateur photo editor to colour grade existing photos from Earth to look like the Martian surface.

Of course, NASA has never shared a photo taken on Earth and claimed it to be Mars.

Specific examples

Devon Island #1

Devon Island #1

Origin

The original photo is the the first colour image from NASA's Viking 2 lander, taken on September 5, 1976.[3] The Viking program was NASA's first mission to land a payload on Mars' surface.

Manipulated photo

The manipulated photo appears to have originated from this website, where the author turns down the red saturation in NASA's photo. The author hypothesises that the photos of Mars from Viking may have been overly red-saturated and not quite in true colour, so they provide the manipulated photo as a possible alternative for what the Martian surface really looks like.

Notes

  1. Becuase flerfs can't ever point to a primary source

References