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Have a look at
1M131212854EFF0500P2959M2M1.jpg By chance (could it be by design? -- I doubt it based on the appearance of the rock prior to grinding), the RAT has cut a partial cross section of one of the blueberries. Look in the lower left edge of the RAT abrasion circle. You'll see a blueberry that has been cut halfway through. THere are clearly no rings in either the x y or z directions. These things definitely formed at a single instant (although they may have been shaped at the bottom of a lake over many centuries). THey did not build up in layers. You can also see there are no distinct internal structures so these berries would not likely be biological in origin. They cut (and polish) just like rocks so they would have to be fairly hard. Possibly fossils or petrified organic matter if you wanted to really speculate on a biological origin. They all are also almost perfect spheres, and remarkably similar in size -- within a hundred or so microns. Place a circle over any one of them and you will see it fits very accurately. They are therefore unlikely to be the product of a meteor splash or volcanic eruption as this would not result in such uniformly perfect and similarly sized spheres -- there would be a large number of irregular berries in such an event, since a splash of molten rock would radiate out along many trajectories. This leaves a water-based formation as increasingly likely. Fluvial erosion is very efficient at producing spherical rocks. I would guess we are looking at objects which have rolled along Martian river beds or beaches at the edge of lakes or oceans. Perhaps later becoming set in sand accumulating and conglomerating with pressure. Mark |
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mlm wrote in :
You'll find the images at: http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/galle...nity_m035.html Several show the 3/4 berry. You can't help but get the impression from looking at these MI images that these berries became lodged in their surrounding matrix at exactly the same time, during the same event. Mark Have a look at 1M131212854EFF0500P2959M2M1.jpg By chance (could it be by design? -- I doubt it based on the appearance of the rock prior to grinding), the RAT has cut a partial cross section of one of the blueberries. Look in the lower left edge of the RAT abrasion circle. You'll see a blueberry that has been cut halfway through. THere are clearly no rings in either the x y or z directions. These things definitely formed at a single instant (although they may have been shaped at the bottom of a lake over many centuries). THey did not build up in layers. You can also see there are no distinct internal structures so these berries would not likely be biological in origin. They cut (and polish) just like rocks so they would have to be fairly hard. Possibly fossils or petrified organic matter if you wanted to really speculate on a biological origin. They all are also almost perfect spheres, and remarkably similar in size -- within a hundred or so microns. Place a circle over any one of them and you will see it fits very accurately. They are therefore unlikely to be the product of a meteor splash or volcanic eruption as this would not result in such uniformly perfect and similarly sized spheres -- there would be a large number of irregular berries in such an event, since a splash of molten rock would radiate out along many trajectories. This leaves a water-based formation as increasingly likely. Fluvial erosion is very efficient at producing spherical rocks. I would guess we are looking at objects which have rolled along Martian river beds or beaches at the edge of lakes or oceans. Perhaps later becoming set in sand accumulating and conglomerating with pressure. Mark |
#3
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![]() "mlm" wrote in message ... Have a look at 1M131212854EFF0500P2959M2M1.jpg By chance (could it be by design? -- I doubt it based on the appearance of the rock prior to grinding), the RAT has cut a partial cross section of one of the blueberries. Look in the lower left edge of the RAT abrasion circle. You'll see a blueberry that has been cut halfway through. THere are clearly no rings in either the x y or z directions. These things definitely formed at a single instant (although they may have been shaped at the bottom of a lake over many centuries). THey did not build up in layers. You can also see there are no distinct internal structures so these berries would not likely be biological in origin. They cut (and polish) just like rocks so they would have to be fairly hard. Possibly fossils or petrified organic matter if you wanted to really speculate on a biological origin. The problem I have with your train of logic is that it's built on the lack of any observed structure in the cut away spheres. A lack of evidence isn't evidence of anything. The observed external structure in the following single pic comprises four elements. The grainy surface, the aperture, the bubble and a slit. None of those elements are consistant with geological explanations. http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/galle...P2933M2M1.HTML All those elements are consistant with a gemmule from a sponge, see link below. Gemmule photo http://waynesword.palomar.edu/plfeb96.htm#gemmules Additional sphere photo http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/galle...P2953M2M1.HTML Jonathan s They all are also almost perfect spheres, and remarkably similar in size -- within a hundred or so microns. Place a circle over any one of them and you will see it fits very accurately. They are therefore unlikely to be the product of a meteor splash or volcanic eruption as this would not result in such uniformly perfect and similarly sized spheres -- there would be a large number of irregular berries in such an event, since a splash of molten rock would radiate out along many trajectories. This leaves a water-based formation as increasingly likely. Fluvial erosion is very efficient at producing spherical rocks. I would guess we are looking at objects which have rolled along Martian river beds or beaches at the edge of lakes or oceans. Perhaps later becoming set in sand accumulating and conglomerating with pressure. Mark |
#4
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March 1, 2004
mlm wrote: Look in the lower left edge of the RAT abrasion circle. You'll see a blueberry that has been cut halfway through. THere are clearly no rings in either the x y or z directions. These things definitely formed at a single instant (although they may have been shaped at the bottom of a lake over many centuries). THey did not build up in layers. You can also see there are no distinct internal structures so these berries would not likely be biological in origin. Actually, sorry to burst your bubble, but I do see internal structures. I see asymmetric banding in the spherule in question, and I also see internal structure in the various spectral composites floating around the net. I even see hints of structure just by varying the contrast, and I certainly see structure in eroded surface spherules and pieces of spherules. They cut (and polish) just like rocks so they would have to be fairly hard. Possibly fossils or petrified organic matter if you wanted to really speculate on a biological origin. Obviously the material has been modified by time and environmental chemistry. They all are also almost perfect spheres, and remarkably similar in size -- within a hundred or so microns. Place a circle over any one of them and you will see it fits very accurately. They are therefore unlikely to be the product of a meteor splash or volcanic eruption as this would not result in such uniformly perfect and similarly sized spheres -- there would be a large number of irregular berries in such an event, since a splash of molten rock would radiate out along many trajectories. Maybe. Maybe not. I'd like to see some credible models and simulations. This leaves a water-based formation as increasingly likely. Fluvial erosion is very efficient at producing spherical rocks. Of all different shapes and sizes. I would guess we are looking at objects which have rolled along Martian river beds or beaches at the edge of lakes or oceans. And all remarkably the same size? Thomas Lee Elifritz http://elifritz.members.atlantic.net |
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