Steve Troy received his BA degree in Liberal Arts and Art Education from the University of Iowa in 1968, and his Bachelor of Science degree in Elementary and Secondary Art Education from Southwest State University, Marshall, MN in 1983.

Mr. Troy has been studying traditional models of lunar historical geology since 1984, and has been an active amateur astronomer since 1988 - eventually acquiring his own images of the Moon with a telescope and digital camera. In 1994, Steve aligned his independent lunar investigation with the "lunar anomaly research" efforts of Richard C. Hoagland and The Enterprise Mission. Steve officially joined the "lunar-anomalies team" of Mike Bara and Richard Hoagland in 1997, and has been a primary contributor to Mike Bara's Lunar Anomalies website and The Enterprise Mission website - co-authoring a series of carefully documented articles and papers on "lunar artifact anomalies," based on official NASA data recorded on the original, raw, analog Lunar Orbiter and Apollo film (non-digital) negatives.

Steve also authored a major independent study - "Who Mourns for Apollo?" - refuting, in detail, the probably false "lunar hoax issues" initially raised by Fox Television in 2000.

Mr. Troy is often used as a reference person for lunar photography research by television production companies from around the world, having compiled his own extensive microfilm (as well as hardcopy and digital library) of original NASA lunar photography. Steve continues to study and document new lunar anomalies daily - found on both the near and farside of the Moon


Mr. Troy will be discussing his entry into lunar anomaly research and how he came to the scientifically-supportable position that "there are ancient artificial structures on the lunar surface, documented by NASA ... and then totally ignored!" Steve will be offering an in-depth presentation of this evidence, showcasing numerous examples of baffling "lunar anomalies" discovered by his efforts both above and on the lunar surface, found on ALL types of NASA photography, going back over 40 years :.

Richard C. Hoagland will participate in a free format discussion at the end of Steve's lunar presentation, presenting some of his most recent lunar discoveries - including, a shocking lunar artifact photographed close-up by one of the last Apollo crews : representing the potential "smoking gun" of lunar artifacts research



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