In terms of narrative, both Remember and Dare criss-crosses past and present - the heroes’ pasts in both dramas have an impact on the current case they are working on. I shan’t say more for fear of spoilers… As for the Ultimate Nemesis character, I’d say both Remember and Dare have a scary enough Psycho to keep you on the edge of your seat. Probably cos Dare spends quite a lot of time on developing Jianyao-Simon’s love line, I kinda feel the earlier cases are shabbily dealt with. Given that this is a psycho-thriller, I’d expect a better explanation on how our profiler manages to solve the case and nail the perp. (i didn’t recall feeling annoyed or frustrated) At least in Remember, we do get a fairly satisfying debriefing. The Badlands Guardian is a geomorphological feature located at 50☀0′38.20″N, 110☀6′48.32″W near Medicine Hat in the south east corner of Alberta, Canada.In Dare, certain stuff are juz left…unexplained. Viewed from the air, the feature bears a strong resemblance to a human head wearing a full native American headdress. The head is a drainage feature created through erosion of soft, clay-rich soil by the action of wind and water. The arid badlands are typified by infrequent but intense rain-showers, sparse vegetation and soft sediments. The 'head' may have been created during a short period of fast erosion immediately following intense rainfall. The apparent earphones are a road and an oil well, which has been in place only a few years, and will likely become invisible once the well falls into disuse and its superficial features are eroded. The Badlands Guardian is an image with the semblance of a human head wearing indigenous Canadian headdress. The terrain in Alberta, Canada accidentally forms what looks like a human face when viewed from the air or when viewing the satellite pic in Google Maps. The feature is best viewed from Google Maps (satellite view). The individual looks like to be wearing earphones and it faces west. The face measures 255 meters across and 225 meters in length. Apparently, the earphones are a road and an oil well built in its vicinity. The lighting is ideal for bringing out the apparent facial features. Although the image appears to be a positive feature, it is actually a negative feature (a valley). The Guardian of the Badlands as seen from above (Google Earth) The feature was discovered during the Google Earth project when they used satellite imagery and reproduced them in 3-D which led to the identification of the natural world. Originally discovered by Lynn Hickox (screen name "Supergranny" on Google Earth), suitable names were canvassed by CBC Radio One program As It Happens. The Guardian is regarded as one of Google Earth’s most remarkable finds. Out of 50 names submitted, seven were suggested to the Cypress County Council. They altered the suggested 'Guardian of the Badlands' to become Badlands Guardian.The chance that this occurs in this particular spot is indeed small. The chance that a natural face-like feature occurs somewhere on the earth's hundreds of millions of square miles of land area is virtually guaranteed. Even if the chance of natural face formation in an area this size is one in a billion, it's utterly unsurprising to find a few faces scattered around the globe. I don't think you'll be able to model the geological and pattern recognition processes to generate a probabilistic estimate that's more precise than one part in a billion. There isn't any evidence to suggest that this formation is anything but natural, and unless your geological model can accurately state that the likelihood of such a face in such an area is less than 0.0000001%, we should not be surprised to find a formation that looks like a face when looking at hundreds of millions of square miles of land area. Photograph: MyLoupe/UIG via Getty Images. At that level of precision, variability due to your choice of assumptions for the modeling are likely to dwarf any meaningful output of the model. Furthermore, Mount Rushmore is a laterally viewed geoglyph TBG is only viewable from above.Īppearance: Vast wild prairies, rich fossil beds and magnificently sculpted buttes. Pareidolia is the phenomenon of perceiving meaningful patterns where there are none. So how was it formedImage analysis by a Boston professor, who. It's extremely common to see meaningful shapes in natural formations like clouds and rocks, even though the formations are natural and random.
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