Mars

Ramone45

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Mars is a barren, rock strewn wasteland. Who'd have guessed? Apparently, the planet went through drastic climate change at some point. Hmmmm. It's almost as though the climate can change whether people are there or not. Guess what. Wind blows on Mars. It sounds like wind blowing.
 
I wouldn't go there. No trees.

I've been out West... meh
 
All of our knowledge, of the way things work, comes from one source, Earth. It's our only example when we try to understand our universe and our place in it. Being able to hear wind blow, on an entirely different planet, only gives us more examples on why things are. Plus, when they find signs of some sort of life on Mars, it will be the biggest discovery in all of history. It will show that we are not special. We are simply another variation of life that spans the universe.
 
You're pretty sure they'll find signs of life.
I, on the other hand, rather doubt it.
Too far from the sun's "sweet spot."

Similarly, Venus is too close.
 
You're pretty sure they'll find signs of life.
I, on the other hand, rather doubt it.
Too far from the sun's "sweet spot."

Similarly, Venus is too close.

Why do you think that? You are using earthly examples and rules of the formation of life. Point being, our rules may not be the only rules. Mars and venus maybe bad hosts for earthly life, but not of their own varieties. That's why this is so important. Our beliefs of how things work may be small and completely underdeveloped. That's why we explore and seek new knowledge.
 
F...ing dyslexia.

It's a fixer upper for sure. I love their bars tho. :)
Yeah, really! Where's the fuckin' nougat? Oh, sorry for the language St.A. Oh crap...two lies in a row...damn me.
 
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Mars is a barren, rock strewn wasteland. Who'd have guessed? Apparently, the planet went through drastic climate change at some point. Hmmmm. It's almost as though the climate can change whether people are there or not. Guess what. Wind blows on Mars. It sounds like wind blowing.

Mars losing its atmosphere has nothing to do with how the earth's climate is changing. The wind blowing on Mars is a good starting point.
 
Mars is a barren, rock strewn wasteland. Who'd have guessed? Apparently, the planet went through drastic climate change at some point. Hmmmm. It's almost as though the climate can change whether people are there or not. Guess what. Wind blows on Mars. It sounds like wind blowing.

Mars lost ( and still is losing) it's atmosphere, while Venus kept it's atmosphere.

Guess which one of those planets that our earth's atmosphere is headed to?
 
Mars is a barren, rock strewn wasteland. Who'd have guessed? Apparently, the planet went through drastic climate change at some point. Hmmmm. It's almost as though the climate can change whether people are there or not. Guess what. Wind blows on Mars. It sounds like wind blowing.

Kinda like Devon Island, eh?
 
Why do you think that? You are using earthly examples and rules of the formation of life. Point being, our rules may not be the only rules. Mars and venus maybe bad hosts for earthly life, but not of their own varieties. That's why this is so important. Our beliefs of how things work may be small and completely underdeveloped. That's why we explore and seek new knowledge.

No, I'm using the Science of statistics.
I'm betting that life on a planet is an aberrant condition.
We had a sweet spot and unusual circumstance long before we had "variety."

That is not "early" as much as empirical.
I don't see us finding as much as maybe some precursors
to what would be considered the building blocks of life. Same with "UFOs."

That goes mainly for Mars, on Venus, I doubt we even as much as a precursor; just soup.
 
Mars lost ( and still is losing) it's atmosphere, while Venus kept it's atmosphere.

Guess which one of those planets that our earth's atmosphere is headed to?

Venus loses atmosphere too.
Eventually, it will also be a rock.

It is dominated by a greenhouse effect: https://www******.com/18527-venus-atmosphere.html

This slows down the rate of loss, but over time, it will be compete.
 
No, I'm using the Science of statistics.
I'm betting that life on a planet is an aberrant condition.
We had a sweet spot and unusual circumstance long before we had "variety."

That is not "early" as much as empirical.
I don't see us finding as much as maybe some precursors
to what would be considered the building blocks of life. Same with "UFOs."

That goes mainly for Mars, on Venus, I doubt we even as much as a precursor; just soup.

I think just the opposite. I think life is common throughout the universe. There are billions of planets where the leap from chemistry to biology could take place. Life as we know it here, developed because of the environmental conditions that suited a certain biology. The same could occur almost anywhere.
 
I think that it is rare, if not unique.



I doubt if it can be found anywhere else in this solar system
and all of the other "potentials" are too far away.

It's just romanticism...
 
Cheese comes from the Moon.

The Redskins came from Mars.

The '67 Cougar came from Mercury.

Aphrodite came from Venus.

Charlie Tuna hails from Neptune.

Luk cums from Uranus.

Pluto's from Mickey Mouse's backyard.

I though we knew all this.
 
Mars could have had living organisms on it. The deepest darkest coldest parts of the oceans has life. It's not beyond reason to assume that at one point there could have been life when there was an atmosphere.
 
For some reason I found the audio of the wind on Mars when I heard it even more fascinating than the images.
 
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