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Jenetta
arvan33
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    life on Mars?

    arvan33
    arvan33


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    life on Mars? Empty life on Mars?

    Post  arvan33 Tue Feb 14, 2012 1:19 pm

    Jenetta
    Jenetta


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    life on Mars? Empty Life On Mars?

    Post  Jenetta Wed Feb 15, 2012 2:19 am




    Those are incredible pics Arvan...what orbiting body took the pics? Nation, etc? Trees and hearts on Mars?

    _____________________________________

    life on Mars? 962334 life on Mars? 992990 life on Mars? 962334 life on Mars? 992990
    arvan33
    arvan33


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    life on Mars? Empty university of arizona

    Post  arvan33 Wed Feb 15, 2012 11:52 am

    Aquaries1111
    Aquaries1111


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    life on Mars? Empty Re: life on Mars?

    Post  Aquaries1111 Sat Aug 04, 2012 11:15 pm



    It was a steamy summer night in New York City, rather like the one expected tomorrow evening and early morning Monday, when Apollo 11 landed on the moon and Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin made history. For those of us fortunate enough to be watching at the time, it was an event like no other — a moment of wonder and pride and a sense that something big really had changed, that we humans had proved rather more worthy of the advantages evolution had bestowed on us.

    Tomorrow night will be Curiosity’s turn to do the same on Mars. No astronauts will emerge from the capsule after it lands deep inside Gale Crater (in working order, one hopes,) and so the moment will not have the same life-or-death drama of extreme human exploration.

    But still, I find the prospect of a successful rover landing — after its hair-raising, seven-minute final descent – brings back memories of those early Apollo days. Such excitement; such enormous risks; such possibilities. [Related National Geographic News features: Inside Mars Rover's "Terrifying" Landing: Hovercrafts, Chutes, and Shields and "Crazy" Mars Landing in Pictures.]

    By dropping a one-ton rover into a Martian crater (with a three-mile high mountain nearby!), and equipping it to search over two years for the building blocks of possible extraterrestrial life; well, that’s once again a moment to savor. Earlier landers, rovers, Mars-orbiting satellites and Earth and space-based telescopes have filled in a few of the untold blanks in our understanding of the planet. But Curiosity has the potential to push things forward at an enormously faster pace.

    http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2012/08/04/mission-to-mars-why-curiositys-landing-is-a-moment-to-savor/

    enemyofNWO
    enemyofNWO


    Posts : 1471
    Join date : 2010-04-10
    Location : Trieste ,Italy

    life on Mars? Empty Re: life on Mars?

    Post  enemyofNWO Sun Aug 05, 2012 12:02 pm

    Aquaries1111 wrote:

    It was a steamy summer night in New York City, rather like the one expected tomorrow evening and early morning Monday, when Apollo 11 landed on the moon and Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin made history. For those of us fortunate enough to be watching at the time, it was an event like no other — a moment of wonder and pride and a sense that something big really had changed, that we humans had proved rather more worthy of the advantages evolution had bestowed on us.

    Tomorrow night will be Curiosity’s turn to do the same on Mars. No astronauts will emerge from the capsule after it lands deep inside Gale Crater (in working order, one hopes,) and so the moment will not have the same life-or-death drama of extreme human exploration.

    But still, I find the prospect of a successful rover landing — after its hair-raising, seven-minute final descent – brings back memories of those early Apollo days. Such excitement; such enormous risks; such possibilities. [Related National Geographic News features: Inside Mars Rover's "Terrifying" Landing: Hovercrafts, Chutes, and Shields and "Crazy" Mars Landing in Pictures.]

    By dropping a one-ton rover into a Martian crater (with a three-mile high mountain nearby!), and equipping it to search over two years for the building blocks of possible extraterrestrial life; well, that’s once again a moment to savor. Earlier landers, rovers, Mars-orbiting satellites and Earth and space-based telescopes have filled in a few of the untold blanks in our understanding of the planet. But Curiosity has the potential to push things forward at an enormously faster pace.

    http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2012/08/04/mission-to-mars-why-curiositys-landing-is-a-moment-to-savor/


    I hope you don't get carried away from the hype .
    Just a quick look at what happened in the past with NASA ( NEVER A STRAIGHT ANSWER ) .
    According to Richard Hoagland's book DARK Mission , when many decades ago NASA made some pictures of MARS available to the journalists , the NASA management sent TV techs around the viewing room to alter the color mix of the land scape of the planet . Apparently the public relation manager could not stand to give the image of a perfectly normal planet to the public . The pictures coming from Mars had to altered to some unreal dark color .
    Then there are witnesses from the Disclosure project that testified that NASA employs people to routinely modify , retouch and hide details that the idiots in charge don't like to make public .
    Then there is the suspicion that the Apollo did not land on the Moon , The movies was shot in Arizona .
    Finally will the pictures coming from the latest Rover be delayed after reception to allow retouching and editing .... AS usual or will they be untouched ? Untouched images might reveal what common humans like us are not allowed to see !!
    Another consideration if the video and pictures are made available to the public with a delay , I will not believe it . I will still endevour to find the trick . Basically NASA is a military organization and I do not believe one word they mutter , publish or broadcast . Your enemy is the USA government .

    enemyofNWO
    enemyofNWO


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    life on Mars? Empty Re: life on Mars?

    Post  enemyofNWO Sun Aug 19, 2012 10:39 am

    100% Proof that N.A.S.A. covers up their photos

    SNIP
    This is Nasa’s famous PIA16051 HD photo That was recently released. This is the upper right side of the sky.

    We all know the sky is blue. We all know that there is life on Mars. We all know that the rover was dropped from one of our Craft.

     Please lets do something about these lies! PLEASE!  —- CLICK IMAGE TO ENLARGE—-

    These are possible ufo’s.


    http://www.google.it/search?q=nasa+PIA+16051&hl=en&client=opera&hs=kQT&rls=en&channel=suggest&prmd=imvns&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=fgcxUK2EIoPj4QSmzIFw&sqi=2&ved=0CEcQsAQ&biw=1594&bih=799


    http://beforeitsnews.com/space/2012/08/100-proof-that-n-a-s-a-covers-up-there-photos-2444994.html


    The photomontage are visible with naked eyes .  HOW ABOUT THAT ! NASA NEVER A STRAIGHT ANSWER


    Last edited by enemyofNWO on Wed Sep 30, 2015 6:07 am; edited 1 time in total
    bobhardee
    bobhardee


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    life on Mars? Empty Re: life on Mars?

    Post  bobhardee Mon Sep 28, 2015 7:43 pm

    9/28/2015

    NASA confirms that liquid water flows on Mars

    It's the first direct evidence of a long-suspected theory

    By Loren Grush on September 28, 2015 11:01 am @lorengrush

    Share on Facebook (19k) Tweet (6,651) Share (150) Pin (5)

    Liquid water exists on the surface of Mars during the planet's warmer seasons, according to new research published in Nature Geosciences. This revelation comes from new spectral data gathered by NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), a spacecraft that studies the planet from orbit. The orbiter analyzed the chemistry of weird dark streaks that have been known to appear and disappear seasonally on the Martian surface. The analysis confirms that these streaks are formed by briny — or salty — water flowing downhill on Mars.

    NASA has advertised these findings as the solution to a major Mars mystery: does the Red Planet truly have liquid water on its surface? Researchers have known that water exists in ice form on Mars, but it's never been confirmed if water can remain in a liquid state. The space agency is claiming that we now have that answer.

    "NASA has advertised these findings as the solution to a major Mars mystery"

    This isn't the first study to suggest liquid water is present in some form on Mars. Scientists have theorized for years that Mars was once home to a large ocean more than 4 billion years ago. And recent findings from the Mars Curiosity rover suggest that liquid water exists just underneath the Martian surface. The discovery of water on Mars has almost become a joke among planetary scientists. Alfred McEwen, a planetary geologist at Planetary Image Research Laboratory who also worked on this research, wrote in Scientific American that the studies have become extremely commonplace: "Congratulations — you've discovered water on Mars for the 1,000th time!" he joked.

    Today's findings seem to offer more direct evidence of liquid water than most, though the study only confirms what NASA has long suspected — that flowing liquid water forms the strange, dark streaks that have been observed on Mars. These streaks — called recurring slope lineae — were first observed by the MRO spacecraft in 2010. The lines are blackish and narrow at less than 16 feet across. During the warmer seasons, the streaks grow thicker and longer; they then fade and shrink at times when Mars is colder.

    Dark narrow streaks called recurring slope lineae emanating out of the walls of Garni crater on Mars. (NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)

    This led scientists to believe years ago that perhaps water and salt were involved in the creation of these lines. "[The streaks] loved forming at temperatures that were right for liquid water to exist," study author Lujendra Ojha, a graduate student at Georgia Tech, told The Verge.

    The average temperature on Mars is a frigid -80 degrees Fahrenheit, but on a summer day near the equator, the temperature can reach up to 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Ojha and his team speculated that when conditions are warm enough, liquid water filled with perchlorates — a type of salt — flow downhill on the planet's sloping geological features. Together, water and perchlorates form a brine solution, which has a much lower freezing point than water. This allows the brine to stay in a liquid state even when temperatures grow colder. Ultimately, the streaks are the leftover salt deposits from these briny flows, Ojha believed.

    The new study published today offers direct evidence that liquid water is indeed involved. Using the MRO's imaging spectrometer, the researchers studied the chemical makeup of the recurring slope lineae. The visible-infrared spectrometer, which can determine the composition of minerals by observing them in different light wavelengths, showed that the dark streaks were indeed composed of hydrated salts that have molecular water in their crystal structure. "What that seems to be telling us is that water plays a key role in the formation mechanism of these features," said Ojha.

    "Water strengthens the possibility of finding microbial life on the Red Planet"

    As for where this water is coming from, Ojha noted there are three possible sources. The perchlorates may be pulling water out of the Martian atmosphere when the air grows particularly humid. The water also may be from a subsurface reservoir of ice that turns into liquid when it comes in contact with the salts. There's even the possibility of an aquifer that is generating the water needed for the briny flows.
    B.B.Baghor
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    life on Mars? Empty Re: life on Mars?

    Post  B.B.Baghor Tue Sep 29, 2015 6:52 am

    Thank you for sharing this with us here, bobhardee. It's quite a significant revelation, I think, presented to the public. How much
    more will follow in the coming years, I wonder.

    Quote from your post, bobhardee:

    "The discovery of water on Mars has almost become a joke among planetary scientists. Alfred McEwen, a planetary geologist
    at Planetary Image Research Laboratory who also worked on this research, wrote in Scientific American that the studies have
    become extremely commonplace: "Congratulations — you've discovered water on Mars for the 1,000th time!" he joked".

    Isn't it strange how scientific explorations move along unusual lines these days? To me, this proves how evidence and facts
    are chosen as truths, according the glasses scientists wear and possibly..... are told to wear? Specially when secrets of human
    origin are involved, in the present and past of Mars? The appearance of all kinds of wild stories on life on Mars and life in tunnels?

    I remember the first photograph, sent to Earth, with the "Face on Mars" removed from the files on internet soon after.
    But soon noticed and picked up by Richard Hoagland and researched diligently. I've seen the history of that research,
    it's quite a read, in the archives of my Dutch town Utrecht, its Celestial Observatory build on a corner of the former
    fortification wall around the city, with a majestic dome for a view through telescopes. A beautiful place.

    I remember an explanation of Mars' past, with beings witnessing the destruction of their living conditions, having used up
    their gold, a gold that was used to maintain a living atmosphere. It had something to do with creating a shield of gold
    particles in the atmosphere of Mars, so that damaging radiance (of the Sun?) couldn't enter and reach the surface,
    threatening their lives in that way. (the idea of chem-trails isn't that new, or so it seems)

    It's for that poor living-conditions, that the beings (Annunaki?) left in their vehicles through space, for planet Earth, created
    human workers for the mining of gold, so desperately needed on their planet. Survival is priority number 1 for all living beings
    in the Universe, in physical worlds of matter, dependent on oxygen or other elements, I suppose. Besides planet Earth, there
    could have been other places in the Universe, where gold was mined. Of what happened in the end, when Mars lost the ability
    to sustain life and became a red barren planet, or became barren due to a war, I don't know much of that story.
    That shield of gold and the mining of it in other planets, it sounds like an intriguing SciFi novel, isn't it?

    The color of red on planet Mars is explained in that the crust of Mars supposedly contains much iron. That should've been
    checked and proven to be true or not, by now, I guess? Have we good reasons to thank those beings from Mars, for being
    alive now? Or am I much too kind now? It's strange to see how gold has become a much discussed subject in a very different
    light now. Or is it different, really? Is this known to you and others here, if the rumors are true, that much gold is transferred
    to this day, off planet Earth, to demanding ET races trading with the powers that have a grip onto that gold?


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