“Martian water has been touched and tasted” quotes a triumphant report from NASA. The Phoenix lander has been doing phenomenal research on the Martian soils. The MRO (Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter) has been beaming radar images of the surface and subsurface of Mars for over 4 years. Huge teams of scientists, ET (extra terrestrial) geologists, from across the world regularly analyze these data searching for vital clues to know if life ever existed or could exist on that red planet.
Since the beginning of the 19th century (or perhaps, since humankind could develop powerful optical telescopes) our curiosity for Mars is afresh. People in every walk of life from planetary observers to common man like you and me are interested in knowing about this mysterious neighbour. The number of spacecraft missions to Mars between 1960s to 2000 is a whooping 37, which holds testimony to our relentless search for knowledge about this planet.
What are we indeed looking for? Water? Minerals? Rare metals? Fuel? Or life itself? What is that one thing which pins is down to this planet? Despite finding frozen water beneath the surface of Titan (moon of Saturn), our search in Mars has never been quenched.
“Part of the reason we are so eagerly searching for extraterrestrial life is that we have not yet determined the origins of life on the Earth!” writes Dr. Alexander Bagrov from the Russian Institute of Sciences. This is the turning point in the story.
Why could it not be, that life on Earth was impregnated from Mars?
Why could it not be, that an earlier, more sophisticated life form from Mars has seeded our evolution? I believe the whole problem has to be seen from this new perspective.
I may sound absurd or wildly imaginative, but if you can fix the results from various explorations together, you may end up in my favour. “The images from Mars3 orbiter depict features which looked very much like river canyons. This made scientists wonder if water had existed on Mars! We now know that Mars was once a warm and humid planet with rivers presumably capable of supporting life” writes Bagrov. Facts like these only add to my claim.
Yes, I hear your question. Although we don’t quite well know about the origin of life on Earth, we have proved scientifically about evolution and how complex organisms evolved from the simplest amoeba. If such would be the case, how could life come from Mars?
To answer this question, we must review that one factor which is hindering human space travel – COSMIC radiation. These high energy rays would spare space crafts, but cause fatal mutations in complex organisms. Hence our ancestors in Mars should have been left with the only option of protecting and sending the simplest of all life forms – amoeba.
Mankind has always been thirsty to know its own roots, whether be the attachment to races or the highly scientific global genome mapping project. Perhaps this is one such search. We should await until the bigger picture unfolds.
5 comments:
reminds me of the movie 'mission to mars (2000)..check it out
liked your thoughts, but check out the movie 'mission to mars'..very similar.
But a few glitches...it was the no aerobic bacteria that came first...then they started brathing leading to a constant balance of gases in the atmosphere...read about James Lovelock and his Gaia hypothesis.
Very interesting article.. Life on the red planet is yet to be proved and NASA clarified on August 6th that the news of Life on Mars was a rumor, through there are evidence of water, ice and nutrients.
Recently people were going wild with their imagination and creativity…a photo released from NASA was imagined to have a female figure
Hello Geodexter,
Nice Article. I would like to emphasize that the team of scientists from SETI ( Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence ) have a more broader search window than our mars - they've been searching the Universe for any alien signals that might reach us. I sincerely believe that looking for alien life is not just our plain thinking as of Hollywood movies, but should be Outta d' Box - For instance - we think aliens should look like oval faced , clumsy fingered beings but in truth they can be anything - even lookin like plain rock !also, when it comes to alien plant life - our conventional thinking makes us believe they should be green ( so we try to focus NIR - VNIR radiation ) but in fact, the pigment coloration depends on the distance from the parent star !
Liked ur article, I was thinking of writing one on this in my website too.
- SpaceBoy aka Shakthi Varman
www.SpaceBoy.in
Thank you all for your interesting comments. Sure, Mission to mars is the next movie I got to watch. i have read about Gaia hypothesis and that its controversial. I would get back after i ponder on it.
Thank you Spaceboy for your interesting comment. It was a very valid and interesting point, the pigmentation of plants depends on the distance of the planet from the star! A new perspective. Thank you for this fact :)
Post a Comment