First images of water on Mars.

Two Thumbs

Platinum Member
Sep 27, 2010
38,220
6,513
1,140
Where ever I go, there I am.
12038663_10156105991980475_2083114653198712730_o.jpg



Some of you might be thinking this is a hoax, but lets be adult about this.
 
Nice one Two Thumbs! I like it!

As far as the water being found on Mars? I'm happy they found it, hopefully they will find signs that life existed (or exists) on Mars.
 
Nice one Two Thumbs! I like it!

As far as the water being found on Mars? I'm happy they found it, hopefully they will find signs that life existed (or exists) on Mars.
Thanks.

If there was enough protection from the sun there should have been some life.

water won't always equal life, there still needs to be some stability.

but hey, the "humans came from Mars' people are totally stoked.
 
Keep in mind, the Aerospace community, led by NASA, officially has no reason to exist. There is no reason to go to any planet, and the budget does not permit any major projects any more. So they publish bullshit like "liquid water on Mars" to give the gullible public the illusion that there is a possibility of life on Mars or some other planet. Which serious scientists acknowledge is an impossibility, unless you posit an infinite number of potential planets. Again, complete nonsense.
 
Keep in mind, the Aerospace community, led by NASA, officially has no reason to exist. There is no reason to go to any planet, and the budget does not permit any major projects any more. So they publish bullshit like "liquid water on Mars" to give the gullible public the illusion that there is a possibility of life on Mars or some other planet. Which serious scientists acknowledge is an impossibility, unless you posit an infinite number of potential planets. Again, complete nonsense.
Well space travel is a fantasy. While people claim advances where made b/c of nasa they can't say that it would not have occurred with any honesty. and really, nasa is expensive and we are $18 Trillion in the hole.
 
Nice one Two Thumbs! I like it!

As far as the water being found on Mars? I'm happy they found it, hopefully they will find signs that life existed (or exists) on Mars.
Thanks.

If there was enough protection from the sun there should have been some life.

water won't always equal life, there still needs to be some stability.

but hey, the "humans came from Mars' people are totally stoked.

Interestingly enough, there IS a meteor that scientists have confirmed comes from Mars and contains microscopic bacteria fossils.

Among these, the famous specimen Allan Hills 84001 has a different rock type than other Martian meteorites: it is an orthopyroxenite (an igneous rock dominantly composed of orthopyroxene). For this reason it is classified within its own group, the "OPX Martian meteorites". This meteorite received much attention after an electron microscope revealed structures that were considered to be the fossilized remains of bacteria-like lifeforms. As of 2005, scientific consensus was that the microfossils were not indicative of Martian life, but of contamination by earthly biofilms. However, in 2009, new analyses ruled out earthly and non-biological origins, presenting strong evidence of life on Mars.[18] ALH 84001 is as old as the basaltic and intermediate shergottite groups — i.e., 4.1 billion years old.

Martian meteorite - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Nice one Two Thumbs! I like it!

As far as the water being found on Mars? I'm happy they found it, hopefully they will find signs that life existed (or exists) on Mars.
Thanks.

If there was enough protection from the sun there should have been some life.

water won't always equal life, there still needs to be some stability.

but hey, the "humans came from Mars' people are totally stoked.

Interestingly enough, there IS a meteor that scientists have confirmed comes from Mars and contains microscopic bacteria fossils.

Among these, the famous specimen Allan Hills 84001 has a different rock type than other Martian meteorites: it is an orthopyroxenite (an igneous rock dominantly composed of orthopyroxene). For this reason it is classified within its own group, the "OPX Martian meteorites". This meteorite received much attention after an electron microscope revealed structures that were considered to be the fossilized remains of bacteria-like lifeforms. As of 2005, scientific consensus was that the microfossils were not indicative of Martian life, but of contamination by earthly biofilms. However, in 2009, new analyses ruled out earthly and non-biological origins, presenting strong evidence of life on Mars.[18] ALH 84001 is as old as the basaltic and intermediate shergottite groups — i.e., 4.1 billion years old.

Martian meteorite - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
yeeaaa, like I said

:lol:
 
12038663_10156105991980475_2083114653198712730_o.jpg



Some of you might be thinking this is a hoax, but lets be adult about this.


So the Planet Mars has enough Oxygen and Hydrogen to support water being on the planet?

A shot from a passing satellite, I seen the pictures also of the surface of a bald planet; with small pools of water. Oxygen in space?

Shadow 355
 
12038663_10156105991980475_2083114653198712730_o.jpg



Some of you might be thinking this is a hoax, but lets be adult about this.


So the Planet Mars has enough Oxygen and Hydrogen to support water being on the planet?

A shot from a passing satellite, I seen the pictures also of the surface of a bald planet; with small pools of water. Oxygen in space?

Shadow 355
it's a long shot.

but even it there ever was, it wouldn't have been more than bacteria
 
12038663_10156105991980475_2083114653198712730_o.jpg



Some of you might be thinking this is a hoax, but lets be adult about this.

Water's all over the universe. Dunno why this is so controversial. Hydorgen's the most common element, oxygen in the top 10. The two coming together to form water isn't unsual or difficult.
 
Just about all the water currently on the Earth came from off-planet. And it's throughout the solar system to this day. Jupiter's moon Europa has a liquid water ocean beneath the ice on the surface, Saturn's moon Titan does too. And it's present in every comet and many asteroids. Water water everywhere.

What's mind-blowing is where water ultimately originates: stars. Before stars gets hot they make and expel water into space.
 
Conservatives want to take this country back and don't believe in doing great things anymore.

What a bunch of idiots.

Which President killed the manned space program so we have to hitch a ride with the Russians
Mattie a delusional partisan.

What about all those shovel ready INFRASTRUCTURE jobs Big Ears spoke of, that did not exist? But, the money went to his friends instead.
 
12038663_10156105991980475_2083114653198712730_o.jpg



Some of you might be thinking this is a hoax, but lets be adult about this.

Water's all over the universe. Dunno why this is so controversial. Hydorgen's the most common element, oxygen in the top 10. The two coming together to form water isn't unsual or difficult.
well the big deal about it is people want to find life on other planets or moons.

considering that no light reaches the bottom of our ocean and there's life down there, the assume leads people to think wherever the is water, there is life.
 

Forum List

Back
Top