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NASA is trying to shake loose Martian fossil bone tissue
Fig. 1 shows nine arrows pointing to vertical blood vessel remains in nine fossil osteons ( bone tissue) in a trench named Snow White. NASA says the white color area is where water ice is, although it is non- continuous and very small in size. NASA plans to scoop up the water ice there on July 8 to put it into an oven for testing. As the soil (containing water ice) is unusually clumpy, NASA plans to shake the soil until it passes the 1mm holes of a screen above the oven, just as NASA did last time. Such shaking could damage related instruments. Have you heard of shaking loose bone tissues, fossilized or not? Couldn't NASA find someone who knows about bone basics? Fig. 1: http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?...1555082227&p=0 Source of Fig. 1: http://www.flickr.com/photos/hortonh...ho/2643489032/ |
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On Jul 6, 10:31 pm, Lin Liangtai wrote:
NASA is trying to shake loose Martian fossil bone tissue Fig. 1 shows nine arrows pointing to vertical blood vessel remains in nine fossil osteons ( bone tissue) in a trench named Snow White. NASA says the white color area is where water ice is, although it is non- continuous and very small in size. NASA plans to scoop up the water ice there on July 8 to put it into an oven for testing. As the soil (containing water ice) is unusually clumpy, NASA plans to shake the soil until it passes the 1mm holes of a screen above the oven, just as NASA did last time. Such shaking could damage related instruments. Have you heard of shaking loose bone tissues, fossilized or not? Couldn't NASA find someone who knows about bone basics? Fig. 1:http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?...1555082227&p=0 Source of Fig. 1:http://www.flickr.com/photos/hortonh...ho/2643489032/ Dr Mc Coy or "Bones" knows of how to handle bones. I know how to handle my own bone ya know. But yippee pipee skipee dee there ain;t no bones on mars not unless you can show some other remnant of a large life form that would undoubtably leave something other than bone and lymph nodes etc. Just how stable would these things be in the kind of environment found on mars? Speaking of stability....I wouldn't know where to start trying to logically debunk your theory. Why don't you provide some ideas on how this tissue got there or is it endogenous? Maybe you can enlighten the rest of us with some explainations that might hold water so to speak You know backing your theory up with facts is what you need to do otherwise its a joke. No bones about it! |
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