Until Mariner 4 photographed craters on Mars in 1965, Earth-bound telescopes were the only way to map the red planet. BibliOdyssey looks at Schiaparelli’s 19th-century maps of Mars, which gave rise to the idea that canals — canali or channels in Italian — criscrossed the Martian surface. It was an optical illusion, but it was an idea that Percival Lowell took up as proof of intelligent life on Mars. (See also io9.)
Schiaparelli’s Maps of Mars
April 26th, 2008 · No Comments · Maps
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