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Originally posted by PlanktonX
If i were the "big boss" i would have granted you a couple of billions and sent you up in space were you could continue research like this and then maybe we would have some disclosure in our lifetime.
John Lear could be the pilot.
Originally posted by zorgon
I like rocks... I collect them, I cut them and I sell them. Unfortunately I can't collect them on Mars yet so will have to let Spirit and Opportunity be my eyes...
Originally posted by Skallagrimsson
Regarding NASA's martian meteorite.... How can they be so sure that that their rock came from Mars??? The earth is bombarded with meteorites everyday. How can they tell which planet it came from??? HOW???
Opportunity
Sol 339
NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has found an iron meteorite on Mars, the first meteorite of any type ever identified on another planet. The pitted, basketball-size object is mostly made of iron and nickel. Readings from spectrometers on the rover determined that composition. Opportunity used its panoramic camera to take the images used in this approximately true-color composite on the rover's 339th martian day, or sol (Jan. 6, 2005). This composite combines images taken through the panoramic camera's 600-nanometer (red), 530-nanometer (green), and 480-nanometer (blue) filters.
Originally posted by zorgon
Originally posted by Skallagrimsson
Regarding NASA's martian meteorite.... How can they be so sure that that their rock came from Mars??? The earth is bombarded with meteorites everyday. How can they tell which planet it came from??? HOW???
I have asked that question here at ATS many times... it usually gets ignored or brushed over... I think I will do a thread on it and see if we can get some real answers
Originally posted by Skallagrimsson
The real mystery is why the great debunkers hasn't gone completely bananas over this long time ago. NASA says it's from mars, and NASA would NEVER LIE about such a thing....
Abstract—Meteoritical BulletinNo. 86 lists information for 1154 newly classified meteorites, comprising 661 from Antarctica, 218 from Africa, 207 from Asia (203 of which are from Oman), 62 from North America, 3 from South America, and 3 from Europe. Information is provided for 5 falls (El Idrissia, Undulung, Dashoguz, El Tigre, and Yafa). Noteworthy specimens include 7 martian meteorites (Ohofar 378, Grove Mountains 99027, Northwest Africa 856, 1068, and 1110, and Sayh al Uhaymir 060 and 090); 4 lunar meteorites (Ohofar 301, 302, 303, and 489); 9 new iron meteorites; a mesosiderite (Northwest Africa 1242); an ungrouped stony- iron meteorite (Dar al Gani 962); and a wide variety of other interesting stony meteorites, including CH, CK, CM, CR, CV, R, enstatite, unequilibrated ordinary, and ungrouped chondrites, primitive achondrites, howardite— eucrite—diogenite (TIED) achondrites, and ureilites.
Nasa's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has finally spotted rocks on the Red Planet that bear carbonate minerals.
The ingredients needed to make the rocks are very evident, so their absence had been a major puzzle.
One theory to explain the omission is the idea that water on Mars has been too acidic to allow carbonates.
The rocks' identification now shows these harsh waters have not dominated all parts of Mars - and that is good news for the search for life.
"You want to get an environment that is basically as clement as possible, that's not difficult to live in," explained Bethany Ehlmann from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.
"It's difficult to live in a highly acidic environment; it's difficult to live in a very salty environment. If you have neutral waters then that presents a less difficult environment for microbial life," she told BBC News.
The US Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) spacecraft found evidence of hydrated silica, better known as opal.