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davethebear
Arken, I love your enthusiasm on this subject, keep it up bro, something will come good in the end. I hope it's you that finds the Holy Grail.........
Arken
Exactly. Some seconds before the Surge, these cavities in the ash were living humans. Then archaeologists came along about two thousand years later and made them into plaster casts and excavated them.
Arken
Gale Crater never doesn't stop to astonish... At a carefull inspection, dozen of anomalies come out from Curiosity images. There is nothing to add to this rock: It appear like an Iguana fossilized in its last moment of life...
mars.jpl.nasa.gov...
mars.jpl.nasa.gov...
reply to post by skalla
does look remarkably
JayinAR
That is not a petrified iguana.
I'm beginning to think some folks around here post these threads simply for stars and flags.
Honestly.
Yes it looks like an iguana, but its obviously a damn rock.
The comparison to the bodies in Pompey are faulty, as has been pointed out twice now and still just sorta sits there.
Something like an iguana would be the least likely candidate for fossilization. The darn thing falls apart with the slightest tug on the tail. Why would you expect to see eyes and not holes in the skull where the eyes used to be?
Good grief, this is just silliness.
How about the odds that life on Mars would have evolved to the exact same biodiversity we see here on Earth?? Astronomical in the strictest possible sense.
Early Mars had a carbon dioxide atmosphere similar in thickness to present-day Earth (1000 hPa).[10] Despite a weak early Sun, the greenhouse effect from a thick carbon dioxide atmosphere,
Char-Lee
JayinAR
That is not a petrified iguana.
I'm beginning to think some folks around here post these threads simply for stars and flags.
Honestly.
Yes it looks like an iguana, but its obviously a damn rock.
The comparison to the bodies in Pompey are faulty, as has been pointed out twice now and still just sorta sits there.
Something like an iguana would be the least likely candidate for fossilization. The darn thing falls apart with the slightest tug on the tail. Why would you expect to see eyes and not holes in the skull where the eyes used to be?
Good grief, this is just silliness.
How about the odds that life on Mars would have evolved to the exact same biodiversity we see here on Earth?? Astronomical in the strictest possible sense.
Nothing about Mars is obvious, we don't even know what happened to the oceans or the atmosphere, but it is thought of have been very like earth so the odds of very similar life forms is great.
Early Mars had a carbon dioxide atmosphere similar in thickness to present-day Earth (1000 hPa).[10] Despite a weak early Sun, the greenhouse effect from a thick carbon dioxide atmosphere,
We know very little, changes in temperature and atmosphere as well as dust storms when rapid could account for preserved life forms.
I actually feel sorry for people who think they know these things for sure. I remember when they told us there would be very very few of the rare suns that had planets around them and I laughed.
skalla
reply to post by florentb
It has absolutely nothing to do with life on Mars, past or present. Do you know my views on Mars' past? Of course not, i have made no reference to that.
It's to do with silly pictures of rocks that look like stuff. Like i said, we may as well post pictures of vegetables that look like other things. Sad Potatoes, a Parsnip with a dick, a Turnip with buttocks.
The quality of the presented material and the subsequent reasoning of how it occurred is poor in this case. Presenting the Pompeii body cavity casts as a method of how such "fossils" may occur is so flawed that it's no longer funny.
edit on 6-11-2013 by skalla because: turnip sounds better