Alien life forms on Mars
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They found alien life forms on Mars. Shall we declare Mars a protected national park?
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Eurs Kweik wrote:
I was thinking more a National Recreation AreaThey found alien life forms on Mars. Shall we declare Mars a protected national park?
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Wait really?
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Where did you hear that from?
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Real troll
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Eurs Kweik wrote:
What's your sourceThey found alien life forms on Mars. Shall we declare Mars a protected national park?
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Demacia wrote:
Well he got me. I usually don't care about the bait. It was worth checking. My heart fluttered for a moment. Oh well.Real troll
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Yay! Now the invasion comes!
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💚Gяз̶͠з̕η̕Μα̴η̨ wrote:
Same here, I pulled up my browser did a quick google search and was disappointed. 😓Demacia wrote:
Well he got me. I usually don't care about the bait. It was worth checking. My heart fluttered for a moment. Oh well.Real troll
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Actually I don't believe this. The opportunity rover is likely not in a location to find life, spirit rover is dead, and mars satellites can not detect life from space, nor do they have the equipment for such a thing. The curiosity rover will not be doing scientific purposes for at least a month. It will take at least two weeks before it can be used for scientific purposes, they don't want to ruin such an expensive, new and great potential life curiosity after all. Make sure everything on it is working and no problems have occurred.
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💚Gяз̶͠з̕η̕Μα̴η̨ wrote:
Same 😔, not sure why I fell for it. I'm pretty sure they won find life else where in our own galaxy. But ya never know.Demacia wrote:
Well he got me. I usually don't care about the bait. It was worth checking. My heart fluttered for a moment. Oh well.Real troll
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Kevster 🇺🇸💀🔫 wrote:
It doesn't matter what the percentage is, no percentage is realistic for life that can make life on earth the only in the galaxy, yet alone the universe. It is out there and the status for the disturbution of life is unknown. We have plenty to learn and so many factors to add to predicting where life exists. Humanity's technology that really counts only developed in the last century, and to an extent 150 years, so we have likely hundreds of thousands and also lowly millions of years of technology advancement to go but I doubt technology has a limit.Same 😔, not sure why I fell for it. I'm pretty sure they won find life else where in our own galaxy. But ya never know.
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Well the organisms don't have to be alive. Dried up little fish would do just fine. Considering there is water on Mars.
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*likely
@Greenman, that would work to. We want to find evidence of past life on Mars of any kind but living life would be a great addition.
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Living life. 😊
💚Gяз̶͠з̕η̕Μα̴η̨ wants to phone home?
I personally think its inevitable to find life on mars.
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I thought they found fossilized microrganisms on mars a long time ago.
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Why can't we just colonise it for heavens sake I mean we should have already done it twenty years ago i mean we hit two birds with one stone by colonising 1 being the colonists can search for life the second being the colonists colonise everybody wins and the us has now subjugated an entire planet
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De Rick wrote:
Several reasons.✂ wins and the us has now subjugated an entire planet
1) Simply put- Politics.
2) Technology. We have the technology but the technology is not largely available. It needs a decade or so to become more common and practical and tested for errors and for assurance that it works good enough.
3) Resources. Do we have it? Yes the USA and NASA does have it. However, the resources needed to get all this there would be a huge waste and impractical. We need better systems of travel that need better technology to get there. This ties into technology. We have it but it is either too new or the ideas are ahead of the technology by some years or decades. Plus the human life isn't worth the risk until we can colonize Mars with much confidence.
5) Practicality. This ties into politics. Is there a huge political interest that would spark a huge movement and thus monetary and public support for this? Not enough. -
I believe life exists out there.
I also believe they see us, and have declared us unstable, destructive, and overreactive, and have basically shunned us, and declare our world restricted from contact -
🔰ℬཞüęℵǿཞ🔰 wrote:
What if they themselves fought a war that killed them all and so no Martians are leftI believe life exists out there.
I also believe they see us, and have declared us unstable, destructive, and overreactive, and have basically shunned us, and declare our world restricted from contact -
Tonytlj add:TLJ wrote:
They apparently "thought" they did. Then they recanted and said they weren't sure. They've been staring the strange microscopic structures in those same meteorites for nearly a decade.... They still aren't "sure" if they are fossilized bacteria or not.I thought they found fossilized microrganisms on mars a long time ago.
Anyone else scared about what's gonna happen when we bring stuff from mars back to earth? I mean what if a recovered rock has a super virus on it, and the vessel containing it, crashes after re-entry and releases the virus into the water or air? Could be potenional extinction.
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🔰ℬཞüęℵǿཞ🔰 wrote:
It is hard to say that.1) If advanced civilizations that exist out there (I'm not talking 'green men' and all that, I'm talking about civilizations that run in ways that are like how they are, like us but a different type of creature with different specie's history and technology), if they can get here at all or have an interest or reason to, have seen us and visited us it is hard to say.
2) It is hard to assume what they are like when we can only base it off ourself. We might be one of the better civilizations in the universe or one of the worst or average. Who knows for sure until we can explore the universe. We didn't think we could but it turned out doffed toy. Hard to predict the future centuries from now when we can't predict twenty years from now for sure. Too many unknown and situation-created factors.
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💚Gяз̶͠з̕η̕Μα̴η̨ wrote:
Only thing I can say to that is oh well.. *chhk chhk* where's that team of scientists..Tonytlj add:TLJ wrote:
They apparently "thought" they did. Then they recanted and said they weren't sure. They've been staring the strange microscopic structures in those same meteorites for nearly a decade.... They still aren't "sure" if they are fossilized bacteria or not.I thought they found fossilized microrganisms on mars a long time ago.
Anyone else scared about what's gonna happen when we bring stuff from mars back to earth? I mean what if a recovered rock has a super virus on it, and the vessel containing it, crashes after re-entry and releases the virus into the water or air? Could be potenional extinction.
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💚Gяз̶͠з̕η̕Μα̴η̨ wrote:
I'll be waitingTonytlj add:TLJ wrote:
They apparently "thought" they did. Then they recanted and said they weren't sure. They've been staring the strange microscopic structures in those same meteorites for nearly a decade.... They still aren't "sure" if they are fossilized bacteria or not.I thought they found fossilized microrganisms on mars a long time ago.
Anyone else scared about what's gonna happen when we bring stuff from mars back to earth? I mean what if a recovered rock has a super virus on it, and the vessel containing it, crashes after re-entry and releases the virus into the water or air? Could be potenional extinction.
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💚Gяз̶͠з̕η̕Μα̴η̨ wrote:
Yes. It would make more sense to study them on the issTonytlj add:TLJ wrote:
They apparently "thought" they did. Then they recanted and said they weren't sure. They've been staring the strange microscopic structures in those same meteorites for nearly a decade.... They still aren't "sure" if they are fossilized bacteria or not.I thought they found fossilized microrganisms on mars a long time ago.
Anyone else scared about what's gonna happen when we bring stuff from mars back to earth? I mean what if a recovered rock has a super virus on it, and the vessel containing it, crashes after re-entry and releases the virus into the water or air? Could be potenional extinction.
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This excited me a lot more than the Olympics.
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I think the money spend on whatever space programs the various nations are funding would be better spent on eradicating poverty. Clean water, mosquito nets, and ensuring each child receives an education would be a good start...
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@TheGreenMachine
You have to think that any Martian life brought back(though I doubt that they could find a living sample, even if they did it would be frozen for storage and all safety precautions would be taken to keep it in its container; if it did crash on entry, the virus would be destroyed in the wreck or kept sealed in its container, but to get back on track...). Any Martian life that could get out has to fight millions of different species that it hasn't seen before. Think native Americans contracting smallpox(although the situation is reversed here). The Martian virus is never exposed to Earths climate, biology, and it's not adapted to infect Earthlike species. -
Tonytlj add:TLJ wrote:
That was my conclusion as well! Or be damn sure those samples are in a tough crate.💚Gяз̶͠з̕η̕Μα̴η̨ wrote:
Yes. It would make more sense to study them on the issTonytlj add:TLJ wrote:
They apparently "thought" they did. Then they recanted and said they weren't sure. They've been staring the strange microscopic structures in those same meteorites for nearly a decade.... They still aren't "sure" if they are fossilized bacteria or not.I thought they found fossilized microrganisms on mars a long time ago.
Anyone else scared about what's gonna happen when we bring stuff from mars back to earth? I mean what if a recovered rock has a super virus on it, and the vessel containing it, crashes after re-entry and releases the virus into the water or air? Could be potenional extinction.
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I'm still waiting for it to snap a pic of the Transformers.
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💚Gяз̶͠з̕η̕Μα̴η̨ wrote:
Has anyone else ever wondered how H.G. Wells' Martians didn't bring alien bacteria to earth? If our diseases killed them, why didn't theirs kill us?Tonytlj add:TLJ wrote:
That was my conclusion as well! Or be damn sure those samples are in a tough crate.💚Gяз̶͠з̕η̕Μα̴η̨ wrote:
Yes. It would make more sense to study them on the issTonytlj add:TLJ wrote:
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