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During their 225-mile-high excursion, the spacewalkers also inspected the station's vents and found a large patch of dark, oily residue and a white, honeycombed substance. It was not immediately known what the substances were.
Originally posted by Nygdan
Intersting. Even if its a contaminant from earth, it'd demonstrate that living things can survive in the space vaccum and hard radiation. But without a food source of some sort?
Originally posted by Valhall
OIMD...yeah, I had mentioned it here.
www.abovetopsecret.com...
I agree, the "oily" and "honeycomb" combined gives a very mysterious description! I hope this issue is NOT dead to the public. I want to hear more!
[edit on 1-28-2005 by Valhall]
amuk
It didnt say it was alive did it?
Thank you for the info, and I had a chuckle over "apocalyptic." Nonetheless, I understand that there was concern by those sending the probes to Mars' surface about being careful not to contaminate the planet with anything earthly for a number of reasons including effecting any changes on the planet by introducing something foreign. Conversely then, I would think the same applies, and so there really is nothing apocalyptic about thinking foreign microbes could be deadly as aids is deadly it is not apocalyptic.
Originally posted by Valhall
Now, the things to consider are: I would think the substance is NOT a "frozen" structure, since the station rotates from sunlight to darkness and fairly intense temperature extremes for each orbit. Also, I don't think it's necessary to get all apocalyptic about this. It could be some kind of precipitate from the exhaust of the oxygen generator, it could be a combination of one condensate with some kind of oil leak, and the two may not mix well (thereby creating the honeycomb effect from the oil "percolating out" of the other substance). But I don't think we need to get all Andromeda syndrome about this...yet! LOL.