Our-mysterious-spaceship-moon-by-don-wilson-pdf | [2021]
Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon by Don Wilson, published in 1975, is a foundational text in the "Hollow Moon" theory, proposing the Moon is an artificial, metallic space station constructed by extraterrestrial intelligence. The work interprets Apollo-era lunar data—such as seismic ringing and specific crater depths—as evidence of a hollow interior, drawing heavily from the earlier Vasin-Shcherbakov hypothesis. For more details, visit the book's overview at Wikipedia.
- The Anomaly: The Moon vibrated for over an hour like a bell, far longer than a solid natural object would.
- Wilson’s Interpretation: This prolonged reverberation suggests the Moon has a hollow interior or contains large, metallic caverns, consistent with a constructed hull rather than a solid rock.
Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon : Don Wilson - Internet Archive Our-mysterious-spaceship-moon-by-don-wilson-pdf
Missing elements: Peer-reviewed citations, mathematical modeling of a hollow shell’s stability, direct physical evidence. Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon by Don Wilson, published
: Wilson highlights seismic data from the Apollo missions, particularly the famous observation that the Moon "rang like a bell" The Anomaly: The Moon vibrated for over an
2. The Central Thesis
Wilson’s primary assertion is that the Moon is an artificial object. This hypothesis is often referred to as the "Spaceship Moon Theory" or the "Hollow Moon Theory." Wilson posits that the Moon was deliberately placed in Earth's orbit by an advanced intelligence to serve as a base, a spaceship, or perhaps an ark for survival. He suggests that the Moon is hollow, possesses a thick metallic hull beneath its surface, and may be considerably older than the Earth.
- The Shard (Tower): A mile-high glass-like spike photographed in the Mare Tranquillitatis region. Wilson claims NASA ordered the Lunar Orbiter to re-photograph the area, after which the images were "lost" or retouched.
- The Blinking Lights: Astronauts on Apollo 11 reported seeing unidentified lights moving on the rim of a crater. Wilson argues these were not cosmic rays but intelligent signals.
- The Lonely Boulder: A boulder that appeared to have rolled uphill, leaving tracks that defy gravity. Wilson suggests this was a disguised rover or probe.
- The Wall: A massive, perfectly straight wall (Rupes Recta) that runs for 110 kilometers. Mainstream science says it is a fault line; Wilson says it is a hull seam.
Beyond technical speculation, the book delves into the "Why?": The Watcher Theory
: Wilson argues that the Moon’s low density relative to Earth suggests it is hollow. Anomalous Composition