Tuesday, August 01, 2006





TOXIC MARS

That's a little disappointing, but finding life on Mars wouldn't necessarily be that much of a bombshell anyway. The possibility that life was carried there on ejecta material following a major impact event here on Earth would always cast a shadow over the discovery of Martian microbes. The upside is that if Mars really is a totally dead world, then we can colonize and terraform it without any serious ethical qualms.


I still think we'll find Martian life. Probably not on the surface, but hiding deep below. Whether it will be truly Martian, of Earth origin, or from elsewhere promises to be one of the central exobiological mysteries of our time.

3 comments:

platts42 said...

I'd bet more money on Europa

Mac said...

I just might bet my *life* on Europa.

Put it this way: If there *isn't* life there, then I'll be shocked.

Kyle said...

Could it be that MOONS are the real cradles of life? Assuming that something smacked our moon eons ago, perhaps life was wiped out there, only to have the "seeds" hurled earthward?

Maybe searching for life on planets is missing the mark...whither the "man in the moon"?

Kyle