I was struck by how similar the satellite image looked to a close-up photo of an integrated circuit.
it’s possible for you to check this out in the comparison published below.
A similar discovery was made by Stephen Young and Paul Kelly, both science professors at Salem State University.
This got the two talking and comparing imagery.
The two scientists have since been collecting puzzling images that are difficult to tell apart.
“Some patterns appear to repeat themselves in nature,” explained Dr. Young toHuffington Post.
Shape and pattern do not define size."
A close-up of the wing of a Green Darner dragonfly.
A close-up of a crystal of sodium chloride or table salt.
A satellite image of North Africa.
A satellite image of deforestation in eastern Bolivia.
A satellite image of Western Australia.
A satellite photograph of dune patterns in Algeria.
An image of bone from an Atlantic Sturgeon.
A satellite image of northern Siberia.
A scanning electron microscope image of the surface of a piece of polished aluminum.
A false-color satellite image of sea-ice in the Weddell Sea.
Reddish regions indicate thick ice.