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http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/PSP_006742_2050
Seriously, this is the place. MSL needs to plop right down into the middle of this, otherwise it's just more of the same old new Mars. |
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On Feb 20, 5:52 pm, kT wrote:
http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/PSP_006742_2050 Seriously, this is the place. MSL needs to plop right down into the middle of this, otherwise it's just more of the same old new Mars. But where's all the Mars salt? Isn't salt rather important for life as we know it? Earth w/o salt and we'd never have existed, or much less evolved into what we know as intelligent life. Earth w/o diatoms is just as pathetic. So, where are those Mars silica shell diatoms? .. - Brad Guth |
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On Feb 23, 3:52 am, "Jonathan" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in ... On Feb 20, 5:52 pm, kT wrote: http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/PSP_006742_2050 Seriously, this is the place. MSL needs to plop right down into the middle of this, otherwise it's just more of the same old new Mars. But where's all the Mars salt? Isn't salt rather important for life as we know it? Earth w/o salt and we'd never have existed, or much less evolved into what we know as intelligent life. Ya mean like this salt lake on earth? Notice the most common feature isn't diatoms, but highly uniform size ...spheres. Lunar and Planetary Science XXXII (2001) BIOGENIC STRUCTURES FROM A HYPERSALINE LAKE IN THE BAHAMAS. "Results and Discussion: Our FE-SEM analysis indicates a range of microbial life forms on the fractured stromatolite surfaces. Spheroidal features are the most common, with four distinct populations, characterized by their highly uniform intrapopulation sizes:"http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2001/pdf/1068.pdf Meridiani is covered with sulfates (salts). Notice it's horizon is flat as a pancake, which only an ocean can form.http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/027...448P2573L5M1_L... Earth w/o diatoms is just as pathetic. So, where are those Mars silica shell diatoms? Like these? http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/180...7BTP2568L5M1_L... .............. http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/galle...5850153EFF3505... Various wide angle images of the spheres. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/136...243P2598L5M1_L.... . - Brad Guth As far as we know, those Mars spheres have not been identified as diatom like, and salt has nothing whatsoever to do with such diatoms other than they could have existed/coexisted in fresh or salty wet environments. For one thing, them spheres is simply way too big for representing silica diatoms, that which you obviously haven't an honest clue about even Earthly diatoms, or of what they accomplished for creating and having sustained life as we know it. Take away our diatoms, and most all life as we know it (especially of the intelligent kind) will simply fail to adapt to such extreme levels of CO2 and of the much lower amount of O2. Thus far, the best available science of Mars hasn't offered 0.1% the salt of Earth, making Mars a most likely once upon a time fresh water and then most likely of an extremely smelly swamp like environment without much solar induced tide (no measurable tide if mostly frozen solid). If there was any significant Mars salt to behold, by now it would have been extremely well identified and accepted as such by multiple peers of expertise, as well as for most every surface m3 or possibly every planetary tonne accounted for. Did those impacts and solar wind manage to blow away or otherwise extract the salt? Thus far, Mars is a nearly salt free environment, of which is odd because being further away from the sun might suggest by those pesky laws of physics that if anything it should have been a little saltier than Earth. Did Mars salt merge with some other cold/inert element and become entirely something other, like perhaps those spheres? . - Brad Guth |
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![]() "BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Feb 23, 3:52 am, "Jonathan" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in ... On Feb 20, 5:52 pm, kT wrote: http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/PSP_006742_2050 Seriously, this is the place. MSL needs to plop right down into the middle of this, otherwise it's just more of the same old new Mars. But where's all the Mars salt? Isn't salt rather important for life as we know it? Earth w/o salt and we'd never have existed, or much less evolved into what we know as intelligent life. Ya mean like this salt lake on earth? Notice the most common feature isn't diatoms, but highly uniform size ...spheres. Lunar and Planetary Science XXXII (2001) BIOGENIC STRUCTURES FROM A HYPERSALINE LAKE IN THE BAHAMAS. "Results and Discussion: Our FE-SEM analysis indicates a range of microbial life forms on the fractured stromatolite surfaces. Spheroidal features are the most common, with four distinct populations, characterized by their highly uniform intrapopulation sizes:"http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2001/pdf/1068.pdf Meridiani is covered with sulfates (salts). Notice it's horizon is flat as a pancake, which only an ocean can form.http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/027...448P2573L5M1_L... Earth w/o diatoms is just as pathetic. So, where are those Mars silica shell diatoms? Like these? http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/180...7BTP2568L5M1_L... .............. http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/galle...5850153EFF3505... Various wide angle images of the spheres. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/136...243P2598L5M1_L... . - Brad Guth As far as we know, those Mars spheres have not been identified as diatom like, Never said they were. Only they are everywhere and need an explanation. and salt has nothing whatsoever to do with such diatoms other than they could have existed/coexisted in fresh or salty wet environments. Right, the salt lake on earth I cited, and Meridiani are very much alike. Meridiani is a dried up salt lake/ocean. Or most likely a shallow subsurface body of salt water. I simply pointed out that on earth, in a salt lake and on mars in a dried up salt lake, they two have one thing in common. The most common feature of ...both...salt lakes are large populations of highly uniform spheres. I find that interesting. For one thing, them spheres is simply way too big for representing silica diatoms, They are silica/iron concretions. Thus far, the best available science of Mars hasn't offered 0.1% the salt of Earth, making Mars a most likely once upon a time fresh water I'm not sure why you keep saying Mars doesn't have the salt for life. In fact the concern is that Mars is too salty for most microbes. http://www.smm.org/buzz/blog/mars_too_salty_for_life And the high salt content, as much as 40% in some outcrops, was the primary evidence for past water. This discovery, the high salt content, was mostly responsible for the Science Magazine Science Breakthrough of the Year just after the rovers landed. http://cmbi.bjmu.cn/news/report/2004...files/Mars.pdf Did Mars salt merge with some other cold/inert element and become entirely something other, like perhaps those spheres? We'll have to wait for better equipped landers, coming soon enough. But Meridiani looks like an evaporated salty ocean floor. The spheres would form in the softer sulfate deposits collecting on the sea floor and weather out after the salts erode away. The question remains on the spheres. No one to my knowledge has shown any earth examples of highly uniform size and highly spherical concretions forming ...without...either being nucleated by organic material. Or growth mediated by microbrial activity. Abiotic concretions are noted for their complete lack of consistancy in sizes and shapes on earth as they take the form of whatever crack and crevice they grow in. No one has explained how the spheres on mars formed, because as far as I can see, they can't form without the ...involvment...of life or at least organic material. And remember, they went to Meridiani because of the hematite evidence which is a good indicator of past water. Well....almost ALL of the hematite is in the spheres, all of it. And they don't know how that came to be. Although they have accomplished their primary objective of finding signs of water, they have left open the debate on life, since the reason for the hematite being present and only in the spheres is still unanswered I believe. http://cmbi.bjmu.cn/news/report/2004...files/Mars.pdf .. - Brad Guth |
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On Feb 25, 4:56 pm, "Jonathan" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in ... On Feb 23, 3:52 am, "Jonathan" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in ... On Feb 20, 5:52 pm, kT wrote: http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/PSP_006742_2050 Seriously, this is the place. MSL needs to plop right down into the middle of this, otherwise it's just more of the same old new Mars. But where's all the Mars salt? Isn't salt rather important for life as we know it? Earth w/o salt and we'd never have existed, or much less evolved into what we know as intelligent life. Ya mean like this salt lake on earth? Notice the most common feature isn't diatoms, but highly uniform size ...spheres. Lunar and Planetary Science XXXII (2001) BIOGENIC STRUCTURES FROM A HYPERSALINE LAKE IN THE BAHAMAS. "Results and Discussion: Our FE-SEM analysis indicates a range of microbial life forms on the fractured stromatolite surfaces. Spheroidal features are the most common, with four distinct populations, characterized by their highly uniform intrapopulation sizes:"http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2001/pdf/1068.pdf Meridiani is covered with sulfates (salts). Notice it's horizon is flat as a pancake, which only an ocean can form.http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/027...448P2573L5M1_L... Earth w/o diatoms is just as pathetic. So, where are those Mars silica shell diatoms? Like these? http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/180...342P2537L5M1_L...... .............. http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/galle...7503553EFF2208...... Various wide angle images of the spheres. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/136...174P2376L5M1_L...... . - Brad Guth As far as we know, those Mars spheres have not been identified as diatom like, Never said they were. Only they are everywhere and need an explanation. And for that "explanation", it seems a more than good enough robotic solution has existed for decades. and salt has nothing whatsoever to do with such diatoms other than they could have existed/coexisted in fresh or salty wet environments. Right, the salt lake on earth I cited, and Meridiani are very much alike. Meridiani is a dried up salt lake/ocean. Or most likely a shallow subsurface body of salt water. I simply pointed out that on earth, in a salt lake and on mars in a dried up salt lake, they two have one thing in common. The most common feature of ...both...salt lakes are large populations of highly uniform spheres. I find that interesting. I find it far more interesting that such dry lakes on Mars are those w/ o their fair share of salt. For one thing, them spheres is simply way too big for representing silica diatoms, They are silica/iron concretions. But apparently not as derived from diatoms or as having any portion of salt. Thus far, the best available science of Mars hasn't offered 0.1% the salt of Earth, making Mars a most likely once upon a time fresh water I'm not sure why you keep saying Mars doesn't have the salt for life. In fact the concern is that Mars is too salty for most microbes.http://www.smm.org/buzz/blog/mars_too_salty_for_life And the high salt content, as much as 40% in some outcrops, was the primary evidence for past water. This discovery, the high salt content, was mostly responsible for the Science Magazine Science Breakthrough of the Year just after the rovers landed.http://cmbi.bjmu.cn/news/report/2004...files/Mars.pdf Then you're saying the new and improved planetology/mineralogy worth of Mars salt is actually there to behold, just not having been previously quantified as such because????? As I'd stipulated before, I'd expect a planet like Mars as having to be saltier than Earth, although why would such Mars salt have been so gosh darn difficult to discover in the first place? You'd think good old salt would have been right up there within the top ten minerals or raw elements discovered as of the first lander. Why has such basic and/or fundamental science taken so damn long? Did Mars salt merge with some other cold/inert element and become entirely something other, like perhaps those spheres? We'll have to wait for better equipped landers, coming soon enough. But Meridiani looks like an evaporated salty ocean floor. The spheres would form in the softer sulfate deposits collecting on the sea floor and weather out after the salts erode away. The question remains on the spheres. No one to my knowledge has shown any earth examples of highly uniform size and highly spherical concretions forming ...without...either being nucleated by organic material. Or growth mediated by microbrial activity. Abiotic concretions are noted for their complete lack of consistancy in sizes and shapes on earth as they take the form of whatever crack and crevice they grow in. No one has explained how the spheres on mars formed, because as far as I can see, they can't form without the ...involvment...of life or at least organic material. Of whatever looks salty and is actually of salt are two entirely different things. And remember, they went to Meridiani because of the hematite evidence which is a good indicator of past water. Well....almost ALL of the hematite is in the spheres, all of it. And they don't know how that came to be. Although they have accomplished their primary objective of finding signs of water, they have left open the debate on life, since the reason for the hematite being present and only in the spheres is still unanswered I believe.http://cmbi.bjmu.cn/news/report/2004...files/Mars.pdf The extreme cold of Mars can do wonders to those surface minerals, and of supercomputers right here on good old mother Earth that's in the process of global warming itself to death, can simulate those conditions within good enough spec. Another spendy robotic mission, and many extra years down the drain (sort of speak), should easily uncover the source and/or cause of those spheres. But then what? (spend a few extra billions and waste yet another decade? or spend another trillion in order to place an intelligent butt load of our human DNA on Mars, when we can't even accomplish our moon?) .. - Brad Guth |
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On Feb 26, 3:54 pm, BradGuth wrote:
On Feb 25, 4:56 pm, "Jonathan" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in ... On Feb 23, 3:52 am, "Jonathan" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in ... On Feb 20, 5:52 pm, kT wrote: http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/PSP_006742_2050 Seriously, this is the place. MSL needs to plop right down into the middle of this, otherwise it's just more of the same old new Mars. But where's all the Mars salt? Isn't salt rather important for life as we know it? Earth w/o salt and we'd never have existed, or much less evolved into what we know as intelligent life. Ya mean like this salt lake on earth? Notice the most common feature isn't diatoms, but highly uniform size ...spheres. Lunar and Planetary Science XXXII (2001) BIOGENIC STRUCTURES FROM A HYPERSALINE LAKE IN THE BAHAMAS. "Results and Discussion: Our FE-SEM analysis indicates a range of microbial life forms on the fractured stromatolite surfaces. Spheroidal features are the most common, with four distinct populations, characterized by their highly uniform intrapopulation sizes:"http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2001/pdf/1068.pdf Meridiani is covered with sulfates (salts). Notice it's horizon is flat as a pancake, which only an ocean can form.http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/027...448P2573L5M1_L... Earth w/o diatoms is just as pathetic. So, where are those Mars silica shell diatoms? Like these? http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/180...342P2537L5M1_L...... .............. http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/galle...7503553EFF2208...... Various wide angle images of the spheres. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/136...174P2376L5M1_L...... . - Brad Guth As far as we know, those Mars spheres have not been identified as diatom like, Never said they were. Only they are everywhere and need an explanation. And for that "explanation", it seems a more than good enough robotic solution has existed for decades. and salt has nothing whatsoever to do with such diatoms other than they could have existed/coexisted in fresh or salty wet environments. Right, the salt lake on earth I cited, and Meridiani are very much alike. Meridiani is a dried up salt lake/ocean. Or most likely a shallow subsurface body of salt water. I simply pointed out that on earth, in a salt lake and on mars in a dried up salt lake, they two have one thing in common. The most common feature of ...both...salt lakes are large populations of highly uniform spheres. I find that interesting. I find it far more interesting that such dry lakes on Mars are those w/ o their fair share of salt. For one thing, them spheres is simply way too big for representing silica diatoms, They are silica/iron concretions. But apparently not as derived from diatoms or as having any portion of salt. Thus far, the best available science of Mars hasn't offered 0.1% the salt of Earth, making Mars a most likely once upon a time fresh water I'm not sure why you keep saying Mars doesn't have the salt for life. In fact the concern is that Mars is too salty for most microbes.http://www.smm.org/buzz/blog/mars_too_salty_for_life And the high salt content, as much as 40% in some outcrops, was the primary evidence for past water. This discovery, the high salt content, was mostly responsible for the Science Magazine Science Breakthrough of the Year just after the rovers landed.http://cmbi.bjmu.cn/news/report/2004...files/Mars.pdf Then you're saying the new and improved planetology/mineralogy worth of Mars salt is actually there to behold, just not having been previously quantified as such because????? As I'd stipulated before, I'd expect a planet like Mars as having to be saltier than Earth, although why would such Mars salt have been so gosh darn difficult to discover in the first place? You'd think good old salt would have been right up there within the top ten minerals or raw elements discovered as of the first lander. Why has such basic and/or fundamental science taken so damn long? Did Mars salt merge with some other cold/inert element and become entirely something other, like perhaps those spheres? We'll have to wait for better equipped landers, coming soon enough. But Meridiani looks like an evaporated salty ocean floor. The spheres would form in the softer sulfate deposits collecting on the sea floor and weather out after the salts erode away. The question remains on the spheres. No one to my knowledge has shown any earth examples of highly uniform size and highly spherical concretions forming ...without...either being nucleated by organic material. Or growth mediated by microbrial activity. Abiotic concretions are noted for their complete lack of consistancy in sizes and shapes on earth as they take the form of whatever crack and crevice they grow in. No one has explained how the spheres on mars formed, because as far as I can see, they can't form without the ...involvment...of life or at least organic material. Of whatever looks salty and is actually of salt are two entirely different things. And remember, they went to Meridiani because of the hematite evidence which is a good indicator of past water. Well....almost ALL of the hematite is in the spheres, all of it. And they don't know how that came to be. Although they have accomplished their primary objective of finding signs of water, they have left open the debate on life, since the reason for the hematite being present and only in the spheres is still unanswered I believe.http://cmbi.bjmu.cn/news/report/2004...files/Mars.pdf The extreme cold of Mars can do wonders to those surface minerals, and of supercomputers right here on good old mother Earth that's in the process of global warming itself to death, can simulate those conditions within good enough spec. Another spendy robotic mission, and many extra years down the drain (sort of speak), should easily uncover the source and/or cause of those spheres. But then what? (spend a few extra billions and waste yet another decade? or spend another trillion in order to place an intelligent butt load of our human DNA on Mars, when we can't even accomplish our moon?) . - Brad Guth BTW, there's no such thing as one all-inclusive type of salt, although mineral rich rock and sea salts are commonly utilized in place of the more pure forms of common table salt. Sodium chloride as NaCI (as common salt; sea salt, halite; table salt) plus any number of other minor elements associated from the environment or nature of the salty deposit area is what makes the complex mineralogy of salt so downright interesting and otherwise essential to life as we know it. I'd have to agree, that too much salt would have put a serious damper on the natural evolution of life as we know it, although not a problem for visiting ETs like ourselves. .. - Brad Guth |
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