I bet a brass eagle stingray and an er2 that we find aliens on mars.
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Will Perseverance Find Life On Mars?
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Originally posted by JonM View PostI suppose that depends on your definition of finding life. I doubt they'll get footage of a Martian lifeform licking the camera lens, but it is entirely possible that they may find trace amounts of ancient organic compounds.Gas, Grass or Brass, no one rides for free...
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I'll take that bet, I've got an ER2s here that says Aint no life on that thar red ball o' dirt!Rainmaker's feedback: https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...maker-feedback
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Originally posted by KMDPB View Post
What about remnants of ancient life? Does that count?Rainmaker's feedback: https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...maker-feedback
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Originally posted by Chuck E Ducky View PostLife currently probably not. History of life no doubt.
There is no doubt in my mind that there is not other planets in the mass of space that can and still do contain life outside of earth. But not on Mars it’s just not stable enough.Gas, Grass or Brass, no one rides for free...
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Mars has never been stable though. Maybe (very, very maybe) it had time to create a few amino acids but even that is sketchy as we don't know how long it even had liquid water. It is extremely unlikely that anything will be found there. Mars, Earth, and Venus are thought to have formed at about the same time - around 4.6 billion years ago. The last time Mars had an atmosphere was over 4 billion years ago. The sun was dimmer then and Mars is even farther out from the sun than we are. It doesn't have a large satellite to stabilize its rotation and is thought to have more variation in its orbit than we ever have had.
So it had little energy available, a short to nearly nonexistent period of liquid water, little to no atmosphere, unstable environment at best...
You're as likely to find Bigfoot in your backyard as you are to find any sign of life on Mars.
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Probably not on the surface. I'm guessing signs of past life.
I'm really hoping for something simple, probably microscopic, single cell type stuff still alive up there.Last edited by Nish; 02-23-2021, 11:59 AM.Originally posted by MAr "... Nish deleted it..."
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I doubt there's anything actually living with the atmosphere as thin as it is, but I wouldn't at all be surprised if they uncovered biomarkers - chemicals that are only known to form from biological processes. That's how we can date the earliest life on earth - we don't have fossils of the cells themselves, but we have biomarkers in rocks that are about 4 billion years old. As far as we know, you can't have the biomarkers without living cells, so that means there were living cells. So if we find the same stuff, or similar stuff, on Mars, that's pretty good evidence there was cellular life there at some point. Which would be AWESOME.
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