Space Invaders in the desert: ISS Astronaut shoots weird infrastructure in southern Egypt

Among the interesting photographs of the Earth he has taken from the ISS, Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano (the one whose helmet filled with fluid during a recent spacewalk) has recently uploaded on his Facebook page one image he titled “Space Invaders in the desert.”

Space Invaders close up

Indeed, the infrastructure depicted in the photograph, has something that reminds the late 1970s arcade games Space Invaders in which in which the player had to control a laser cannon moving horizontally across the bottom of the screen and fire at descending rows of aliens and their mystery ship.

We struggled to identify the site until we found someone on Parmitano’s Facebook page who pointed to this location (in a remote region of southern Egypt at the following coordinates 22.786311, 28.520508).

Even if there are various theories, some of those quite funny (as the one mentioning a GPS alignment site), the one photographed by the Italian Air Force test pilot and astronaut looks like a normal oilfield.

What’s your opinion?

Update: according to a comment it is a large agricultural site. “The pattern is a result of a Central Pivot Irrigation system (equipment rotates around a pivot, creating a circular pattern in crops when viewed from above). You can find these all over the Middle East and are often associated with unseen underground water supplies.”

Image credit: @Astro_Luca

 

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About David Cenciotti
David Cenciotti is a journalist based in Rome, Italy. He is the Founder and Editor of “The Aviationist”, one of the world’s most famous and read military aviation blogs. Since 1996, he has written for major worldwide magazines, including Air Forces Monthly, Combat Aircraft, and many others, covering aviation, defense, war, industry, intelligence, crime and cyberwar. He has reported from the U.S., Europe, Australia and Syria, and flown several combat planes with different air forces. He is a former 2nd Lt. of the Italian Air Force, a private pilot and a graduate in Computer Engineering. He has written five books and contributed to many more ones.