RE: This is the Single Best Evidence Flat Earthers Have, and it Still Proves the Earth is a Sphere

You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

This is the Single Best Evidence Flat Earthers Have, and it Still Proves the Earth is a Sphere

in science •  7 years ago 

Do you have any photos of the curve or do you see it in this photo? Do you have a diagram of perspective showing a curve in this instance? I'm seeing a big mountain range coming out of a flat plain. and then if you turn around (as in the other photos - it's still flat for as far as you can see - 100+ miles. So where is the curve?

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

I have provided ALL of that to you in this article, other articles I've referred you to, and in the answers on this thread.

And again, WHY do you think you should SEE the curvature in this image? Please provide your math and diagrams. You continue to say that you think you should see something, but you have zero reasons why you believe that!

In this image, we would ALSO need distance from the observer to the object and the viewer height. Without that, you are not providing anything at all. But I've already done ALL the work on the longest distance image in the world, and it's completely consistent with the globe.

Perhaps you might understand better when something is MISSING from the image. Can you please explain to me why the end of the Suez canal is missing an entire ocean... but we can see the sky beyond the canal?

You say you can't SEE the curve, yet you DON"T see an entire ocean. And every time you look out across the ocean, you DON"T see cities, island, and mountains beyond that. That IS the curve!

suez canal where's the ocean curvauture.jpg

I'm not sure why that is so difficult to understand. When flat earthers show their images, they always show what you CAN see, but the question is why we can't see MUCH MUCH further than we do, and why to get these long distance photographs, we have to go so high!

In the image that is the topic of this article, to get that long distance shot, the photographer had to go to almost 10,000 feet. Why? Because of the curvature of the earth.

Here's another image of 'what's missing. What you don't see is the bottom of the mountain that is behind the curvature. This requires math to prove it's the correct distance behind the curve, but it's not complicated math to see that half the mountain is missing in the image.

curvature mt rainier missing.jpg

Perhaps I can provide more images of 'what's missing'. My next article covers that a bit.