Nevertheless, Wilson's book doesn't aim to be a peer-reviewed scientific paper. It is a work of provocative investigative journalism that asks "what if?"
: Wilson utilizes quotes from figures like Isaac Asimov to highlight the statistical improbability of the Moon's size and circular orbit. "Avventure Becco Stuf" Nevertheless, Wilson's book doesn't aim to be a
The team's chief scientist, a quirky and enthusiastic woman named Sophia, rushed forward to examine the becco. She carefully extracted it from the ground and held it up to the light, studying it with a mixture of fascination and confusion. She carefully extracted it from the ground and
Don Wilson, a renowned astrobiologist with a penchant for the unexplained, had long been fascinated by the Moon's enigmatic presence. His book wasn't just another scientific analysis but a daring hypothesis: what if the Moon wasn't a natural satellite at all? What if it was, in fact, a colossal spaceship, left behind by an advanced civilization to monitor the development of life on Earth? What if it was, in fact, a colossal
Before the internet connected every fringe theory, Don Wilson’s 1975 book Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon was a tangible artifact of the unexplained. It was a cornerstone of the "Hollow Moon" hypothesis, a theory that suggests Earth’s celestial companion is not a natural rock, but an artificial satellite—a "spaceship"—parked in orbit by an ancient intelligence.
The central premise of Wilson's book is an exploration of the "Spaceship Moon" theory, originally proposed by Soviet scientists Mikhail Vasin and Alexander Shcherbakov in 1970. Wilson compiles what he calls supporting evidence for this radical hypothesis: that the Moon is actually a gigantic, hollowed-out spacecraft parked in Earth's orbit by an intelligent alien species.
Locations like the Becco di Dossena feature 16-meter walkways suspended 250 meters in the air, offering panoramic views of deep valleys that mimic the vastness of craters.