
I thought this might be the image to which you were referring tappet. You may recall that last time you posted it, I commented that, in my opinion at least, this shows an effect only possible on a round earth. Allow me to clarify: in this image, we see a well-defined horizon, with equally well-defined objects clearly appearing
beyond said horizon (note: I say 'well-defined', not 'crisp', meaning that, while they are a little fuzzy, they are still easy to tell apart). On a flat earth, in the absence of any thus-far unknown properties of light, this image would be
impossible. Why? Simple geometry: nothing on a flat earth could
ever appear to be beyond the horizon, as the horizon would either be the limit of vision (in which case, anything beyond that distance is not visible), or the edge of the earth (in which case, there is nothing beyond that point other than empty space).
EarthIsASpaceship and Novice, I would be interested to see you
prove that the distant objects seen here can be brought back from 'over the horizon' with magnification only. That is your assertion, is it not?