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Mars life
NASA has made big progress these days. After several decades, they tell
us that organics exist in mars. At the same time, the atmosphere has seen increases in methane what means that under the rover something is breathing. Fossils have been seen by specialists in the photographs sent by the machine. But more than fossils, it would be interesting to try to get to those beings? I mean to try to study them? Inspect the soil, the natural entrances, protected, small cavities in the rock. Nasa has gone an important step, but that doesn't mean that they will change their attitude much. All indications for life (water under the surface, methane emmissions, fossils, magnetite, and many other hints) point to the fact that something is breathing under the rover. What will humans do? This time we are lucky since the rover hasn't moved and the methane is coming right from underneath... C'mon NASA. Pleeeeeeeze? LOOK FOR LIFE NOW! |
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Mars life
On Saturday, December 17, 2016 at 9:48:22 AM UTC+13, jacob navia wrote:
NASA has made big progress these days. After several decades, they tell us that organics exist in mars. At the same time, the atmosphere has seen increases in methane what means that under the rover something is breathing. Fossils have been seen by specialists in the photographs sent by the machine. But more than fossils, it would be interesting to try to get to those beings? I mean to try to study them? Inspect the soil, the natural entrances, protected, small cavities in the rock. Nasa has gone an important step, but that doesn't mean that they will change their attitude much. All indications for life (water under the surface, methane emmissions, fossils, magnetite, and many other hints) point to the fact that something is breathing under the rover. What will humans do? This time we are lucky since the rover hasn't moved and the methane is coming right from underneath... C'mon NASA. Pleeeeeeeze? LOOK FOR LIFE NOW! http://www.stuff.co.nz/science/81218...-Martiansadmin The Viking Probe discovered life on Mars forty years ago, but according to the principal investigator at the time Harold Klein, NASA suppressed the news. http://www.encyclopedia.com/science/...klein-harold-p |
#3
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Mars life
On 12/16/2016 3:48 PM, jacob navia wrote:
NASA has made big progress these days. After several decades, they tell us that organics exist in mars. At the same time, the atmosphere has seen increases in methane what means that under the rover something is breathing. Fossils have been seen by specialists in the photographs sent by the machine. But more than fossils, it would be interesting to try to get to those beings? I mean to try to study them? Inspect the soil, the natural entrances, protected, small cavities in the rock. Nasa has gone an important step, but that doesn't mean that they will change their attitude much. All indications for life (water under the surface, methane emmissions, fossils, magnetite, and many other hints) point to the fact that something is breathing under the rover. What will humans do? This time we are lucky since the rover hasn't moved and the methane is coming right from underneath... C'mon NASA. Pleeeeeeeze? LOOK FOR LIFE NOW! Decide for yourself if the following pics show signs of microbial activity. It's almost impossible to explain the shear abundance and often pristine condition of these spheres from conventional Earthly concretion formation. Which takes geologic time and such concretions vary widely in shape and size from one site to another. Yet on Mars they come in only two or three highly uniform sizes. And I'd like to add these are among the /very first/ close up pictures from the surface of another planet. And we just happened to land in a field coated with /countless billions/ of these as yet unexplained spheres. Our first close look at another planet and this mystery was found that remains a mystery to this day. The most recent explanation is they self organized in shallow wet subsurface soil. While on Earth concretions form within rocks and have to weather our over hundreds of millions of years, and they tend to take the shape of the crack or crevice in which they formed so on Earth concretions are rarely uniform in size. Decide for yourself. One of my favorite Mars pics. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/012...L4L5L5L5L6.jpg Before looking at the close ups of the spheres, here is a wide angle color view of the same area. Notice the lack of large rocks, meaning this is a very young site. Notice the curious dunes and what appears to be where underground water might have once pooled up from below. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/081...5L7L7.jpg.html http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/081...5L7L7.jpg.html http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/081...L2L5L5L7L7.jpg http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/081...5L7L7.jpg.html If you think the fine dunes above are wind blown features, look below, you'll see the soil is crusted over, the dunes are usually cemented in place. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/060...5L6L6.jpg.html And look closely at the dunes, they are made up of tiny spheres also, the fields are coated with small spheres a couple millimeters in diameter, while the dunes are made of tiny spheres a tenth of a millimeter in size. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/060/#54 And look at the field, the horizon is razor flat, only a sheet of ice or body of water can create that straight-edge horizon. This field was the floor of a dried up shallow sea. Possibly an underground body of water. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/060...5L6L6.jpg.html http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...0P2956M2M1.JPG http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...nity_m177.html http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...0P2956M2M1.JPG http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...nity_m125.html http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...nity_m039.html http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...nity_m182.html http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...P2977M2M1.HTML http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...P2977M2M1.HTML http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...nity_m158.html http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...nity_m029.html http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/012...L4L5L5L5L6.jpg http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...P2908M2M1.HTML http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...P2957M2M1.HTML http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/180...L4L5L5L5L6.jpg http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/069...5M1_L4L5L5L5L6. http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/069...5L7L7.jpg.html http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/505...5M1_L2L5L5L6L6. http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...P2953M2M1.HTML http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...P2933M2M1.HTML http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...nity_m188.html http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...nity_m186.html http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...nity_m182.html http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all...P2908M2M1.HTML http://areo.info/mer/opportunity/ http://mars.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all/opportunity.html Much of the northern hemisphere of Mars is said to have as much as 50% water ice just a few meters below the surface, Mars water went mostly underground not into space. As as you go deeper the temperatures warm while the protection from the sun also increases. So there's a vast potential biosphere just a few meters underground across almost half the planet where warm, wet chemical rich soil could create the ideal conditions for microbial life. But NASA wants to save the big discovery for a sample return mission or even a manned mission. Which is why the next rover won't be able to detect current life on Mars either, just signs of....ancient life. Just as all the previous rovers were....deliberately sent without the science instruments needed to prove life exists on Mars now. NASA doesn't want to know as they fear it would take the steam out of their future plans for Mars if that mystery were taken off the table. s |
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