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A geological phenomenon vaguely similar to this doesn't quite exists.
Originally posted by cedargrove
Is it just me or do the 'trees' just look like fractal patterns? We can see the same patterns in our blood vessels and other biological structures. For example, "The fractal structure nature has devised works so efficiently that, in most tissue, no cell is ever more than three or four cells away from a blood vessel. Yet the vessels and the blood take up little space, no more than about five percent of the body." Just thought that fact was interesting.
But observing a fractal pattern on other planet doesn't seem that far-fetched. Here's a www.umanitoba.ca..." target="_blank" class="postlink">link that lists a few fractal applications in science, including some that are soil and landscape related.
The pictures are interesting but I don't think they are close to conclusive proof. And using statements like...
A geological phenomenon vaguely similar to this doesn't quite exists.
... doesn't help the credibility of the argument.
Originally posted by Jack of Scythes
I know the information isn't easy to find. I had heard a radio interview several years ago on coast-to-coast, hosted by Art Bell. He spoke with Arthur C. Clarke while he was in India.
The crux of getting proof about this is that the past shows are archived, but you have to be a member of the show's streamlink to have access to it. A simple search engine would bring up the interview.
There was a rumor that finding life on Mars was Clarke's motivation to write "2001: A Space Oddessy".
1995 - Awarded the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal
Originally posted by iori_komei
it's planetary core is cold and dead
Originally posted by MadGreebo
With regards to the ice in the crater.... well surface water without heating would freeze would it not?? what im saying is that the pictured water could ( Not is) be heated by geo thermal events. I agree the whole of mars doesnt have surface water, but i do think there is warm surface water till it freezes or is evaporated.
Thos pictures to me sure as heck look like trees and water to me.
Originally posted by cedargrove
The pictures are interesting but I don't think they are close to conclusive proof. And using statements like...
A geological phenomenon vaguely similar to this doesn't quite exists.
... doesn't help the credibility of the argument.
Originally posted by cmdrkeenkid
Originally posted by iori_komei
it's planetary core is cold and dead
Keep in mind that that's in a geological manner. If you got down deep enough the pressure of the above soil and atmosphere would be enough to generate heat. This is one reason why it's hypothesized that Mars has underground aquifers.
Originally posted by MadGreebo
With regards to the ice in the crater.... well surface water without heating would freeze would it not?? what im saying is that the pictured water could ( Not is) be heated by geo thermal events. I agree the whole of mars doesnt have surface water, but i do think there is warm surface water till it freezes or is evaporated.
There arn't any geothermal events that could heat the water, though. And no, the main reason the water is frozen is because it was probably deposited there through glaciers. The crater is near the north pole (at 70.5 degrees of northern lattitude) and is shielded from Sunlight. Since Sunlight never falls upon the ice, it doesn't sublimate (go straight from a solid to a gas).
Thos pictures to me sure as heck look like trees and water to me.
That's all fine and well, but does it mean that they actually are trees?
Originally posted by cedargrove
The pictures are interesting but I don't think they are close to conclusive proof. And using statements like...
A geological phenomenon vaguely similar to this doesn't quite exists.
... doesn't help the credibility of the argument.
Agreed!
Stratrf_Rus, your thought on fractals are... different. I would suggest doing some research on them before making such bold statements. Here, I'll even get you started.
Dictionary.com - fractal
Wikipedia - fractal
Originally posted by Stratrf_Rus
1) Pressure typically "lowers temperature" for all intents and purposes by raising the freezing temperature. Thus it doesn't "generate heat".
Rather, internal heat within the crust (both of Earth and Mars) is due to radioactive elements (almost exclusively).
Below the crust is the mantle, a dense, hot layer of semi-solid rock approximately 2,900 km thick. The mantle, which contains more iron, magnesium, and calcium than the crust, is hotter and denser because temperature and pressure inside the Earth increase with depth.
Originally posted by Stratrf_Rus
Anything after that is about as useful as Theoretical Math (which is absolutely useless).
Originally posted by cmdrkeenkid
The sand is a lot less dense than the sand on Earth. On top of that, so is the atmosphere. This allows for sand to be taken into Mars' upper atmosphere instead of being blown relatively close to the surface like on Earth. So erosion wouldn't happen as quickly.
Originally posted by LazarusTheLong
Actually... Cmddr
You were being needlessly rude (before starting to actually contribute)... and in some circumstances wrong...
Mods are supposed to be helpful? yes?
The website that was refered was amaturish sure... but it did bring up some points that I too am curious about ... No need to be snooty about it though...
the observation comes from logic (incomplete as it is)
Regardless... there is something to these, that goes way past a wrongful assumption of what country Asimov moved to... so why dont we drop that little argumentative tidbit, since it matters NOT ONE IOTA...
Originally posted by Jack of Scythes
Greetings Fellow Believers,
Arthur C. Clarke, the author of "2001: A Space Oddessy", was part of the NASA team that lauched the first Mars Surveyor back in the 1970s. Photos taken by that orbiter caught his attention, and he announced that there were objects that looked like stunted trees at the poles.
His observation was first laughed at. After he persisted, he began to get death threats. India offered him asylum if he paid for the construction of a university. Arthur C. Clarke is still there.
Is there life on Mars? Yes. Are there ruins on Mars? Yes.
Sometimes it is more shocking when fact overcomes belief.
Originally posted by cmdrkeenkid
Originally posted by Stratrf_Rus
1) Pressure typically "lowers temperature" for all intents and purposes by raising the freezing temperature. Thus it doesn't "generate heat".
Who was/is your science teacher? Either they're not doing a good job teaching, or you're were not/are not doing a good job listening. Temperature is directly related to pressure.
Luckily for you, and anyone else who thinks otherwise, I found this nice little Java Applet that can help you understand the basics of how pressure and temperature are related.
Kinetic Molecular Theory: Pressure-Temperature Relation
If you don't want to click the link, then riddle me this: If lower pressure means lower temperatures, why is it so cold in the upper atmosphere?
Rather, internal heat within the crust (both of Earth and Mars) is due to radioactive elements (almost exclusively).
While I couldn't find anything to back up what you said there, I did find a USGS website saying that pressure is involved.
The Dynamic Earth from USGS
Below the crust is the mantle, a dense, hot layer of semi-solid rock approximately 2,900 km thick. The mantle, which contains more iron, magnesium, and calcium than the crust, is hotter and denser because temperature and pressure inside the Earth increase with depth.
So from the evidence I've provided the pressure and temperature would directly effect the possibilities of there being liquid water on the surface or below it.
[edit on 2/23/2006 by cmdrkeenkid]
Originally posted by Enkidu
Yeah, but still. After a billion or two years? I could rub a diamond with a feather and wear it down after a billion years.
Originally posted by LazarusTheLong
Actually... Cmddr
You were being needlessly rude (before starting to actually contribute)... and in some circumstances wrong...
Mods are supposed to be helpful? yes?
the observation comes from logic (incomplete as it is)
Regardless... there is something to these, that goes way past a wrongful assumption of what country Asimov moved to... so why dont we drop that little argumentative tidbit, since it matters NOT ONE IOTA...
also, we can drop any science that proves trees cant live on Mars... of course they cant... but something looks like it can.. what iss it?
these may even be colony sytems of critters (maybe microbes) that form like coral does here... but uses the wind as a medium.
Originally posted by Stratrf_Rus
So from the evidence and arguments I've presented you're flat out wrong and probably reading some USGS site for highschoolers.
Originally posted by Stratrf_Rus
Oh and cmdrkeen the atmosphere is not a constant or even exponential gradient from the surface to space from hotter to colder.
The atmosphere has layers which have varying temperatures.
Originally posted by Dutch_Rick
Did you guys know that if you correct the RGB settings on Mars photographs the sky will turn blue and you will see alot of green and water on the ground?
Originally posted by Dutch_Rick
Did you guys know that if you correct the RGB settings on Mars photographs the sky will turn blue and you will see alot of green and water on the ground?
It doesnt work on photo's of other planets...they are messing with the RGB, and yes i do think that the alternative 3 video was real... pretty good if you can hoax that, completly with a monster moving through the bushes and a view from inside a spacecraft, back in those years.
Also what i saw in that video was the same environment and colours that you see on Mars photographs if you restore the RGB settings
Originally posted by whitelightwolf
there is apparently a Mole on there too. After watching the Alternative 3 video, I'm not sure what to believe. If that was hoax...or if it was real, and the russians really did go to Mars.