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ALIEN bugs are responsible for strong plumes of methane gas detected on Mars, it was claimed tonight.
Nasa scientists say the gas emissions could have either a geological or biological source - as The Sun exclusively revealed today.
Mars today is a world of cold and lonely deserts, apparently without life of any kind, at least on the surface. Worse still, it looks like Mars has been cold and dry for billions of years, with an atmosphere so thin, any liquid water on the surface quickly boils away while the sun's ultraviolet radiation scorches the ground.
But there is evidence of a warmer and wetter past -- features resembling dry riverbeds and minerals that form in the presence of water indicate water once flowed through Martian sands. Since liquid water is required for all known forms of life, scientists wonder if life could have risen on Mars, and if it did, what became of it as the Martian climate changed.
Originally posted by mckyle
Originally posted by Ha`la`tha
ahh hehe must be one of those morbid days for me... 8/
You've got to stop listening to that Pink Floyd music. It'll do it to you every time mate
Yes, I often think about the image of Mars and what it might portend for us.
Now you've got me feeling dark!
[edit on 24-11-2009 by mckyle]
Originally posted by HanoverFat
to me, saying that there was liquid water on Mars at one stage in the planets history is as good as saying there was life there.
Originally posted by SaturnFX
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
In fact since we've found Mars rocks on Earth with possible traces of life, -snip-
And how do they know where a meteorite comes from anyhow...have a little M stamped on it?
The process of how they determine where meteors is almost laughable...funny read really, really eye opening as basically you have to dismiss every possibility at the beginning, decide where you want it to come from, and then make up reasons why (oh..theres less formed crystals, therefore its a earthlike planet in size, and therefore since venus is too atmospheric it has to be mars).
Meteorite determination is hardly a science (especially considering we havent done a ton of soil sample tests on the ground of said planets...)
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by cowboys703
That young? I didn't know there was evidence of tectonic or volcanic activity on Mars that "recently". Can you prove a source(s)?
Originally posted by berenike
Methane on Mars:
www.thesun.co.uk...
ALIEN bugs are responsible for strong plumes of methane gas detected on Mars, it was claimed tonight.
Nasa scientists say the gas emissions could have either a geological or biological source - as The Sun exclusively revealed today.
This article (from January 2009) includes a video.
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/c6b5bc8d83e2.jpg[/atsimg]
A bit more about Martian Methane:
www.nasa.gov...
This image shows concentrations of methane on Mars:
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/4dbd35467c0f.jpg[/atsimg]
Mars today is a world of cold and lonely deserts, apparently without life of any kind, at least on the surface. Worse still, it looks like Mars has been cold and dry for billions of years, with an atmosphere so thin, any liquid water on the surface quickly boils away while the sun's ultraviolet radiation scorches the ground.
But there is evidence of a warmer and wetter past -- features resembling dry riverbeds and minerals that form in the presence of water indicate water once flowed through Martian sands. Since liquid water is required for all known forms of life, scientists wonder if life could have risen on Mars, and if it did, what became of it as the Martian climate changed.
************
Heres something about Meteorite ALH84001 which may have had evidence of ancient alien life:
nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov...
AND HERE'S GOOGLE MARS:
www.google.com...
Yessss!!!!!
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/c18e8e6a059a.jpg[/atsimg]
[edit on 24-11-2009 by berenike]
Originally posted by cowboys703
The meteorite should also be higher in volatile elements and should have an age close to the age of the Martian crust (roughly 180 million years old).
Using the current understanding of crater density, a maximum of 15 percent of the Martian surface could be as young as 175 million years old, Mittlefehldt said. Even getting that high of a percentage is really stretching the model, he said.
Originally posted by berenike
Here are some pictures of Mars in Winter:
www.dailymail.co.uk...
I've had to crop the images to get them to fit.
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
Originally posted by cowboys703
The meteorite should also be higher in volatile elements and should have an age close to the age of the Martian crust (roughly 180 million years old).
Thanks for the links you provided to support that statement, but this link (one of the two you provided) doesn't really seem to support that statement:
www.space.com...
Using the current understanding of crater density, a maximum of 15 percent of the Martian surface could be as young as 175 million years old, Mittlefehldt said. Even getting that high of a percentage is really stretching the model, he said.
So if we got meteorites from random locations on the Martian surface, maybe 15% of them should be in that 175-180 million years old age range, but for some reason the percentage of meteors we get of that age is far higher, so either the process by which we get them is non-random or something is wrong with some other parts of the science.
But 85% of them should be older than that 175-180 million year old age range according to those estimates, since 85% of the Martian surface is older than that, am I reading that right?
[edit on 27-11-2009 by Arbitrageur]