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2006-12-30 07:21:05 · 11 answers · asked by *sumASTRONAUT* 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

11 answers

The next Earth perhaps, once we culture it. It's not like it's really doing anything of use on it's own to my way of thinking. Why not.

2006-12-30 07:28:21 · answer #1 · answered by Answerer 7 · 1 0

Mars is a very interesting place which did (and may still do !) contain life at some point in time, but is now a dead planet which was destroyed in the past by some form of massive missiles or meteorites impacting onto its surface resulting in the planet being nearly torn apart (at the point of Valle's Marineris). I also think it is quite possible that life existed on Mars before Earth, and maybe we are descendants. There is something very mysterious about Mars and I think some people on Earth don't want us to know what it is !

2006-12-31 04:08:20 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Mars is a big mystery. Millions of years ago there may have been some sort of alien inhabitants of the red planet. Mars is believed to ahve been covered in water because of the iron on the planet surface rusted thats what makes it red. You have ice at the poles so Mars could be our next home when some of its secret come out. bye bye earth hello mars

2006-12-30 17:25:38 · answer #3 · answered by Vader 2 · 0 0

The Red Planet, Mars, is utterly fascinating, and its mysteries are worthy of further exploration, including establishing a scientific base for more in-depth and hands-on research.

If the U.S. can spend 4 billion dollars on a "destructive" bottomless-pit-war, then obviously it can spend a fraction of that cost on a "constructive" space program to Mars, which will produce "positive" by-product research results, i.e. advances in technologies for a whole assortment of fields from biomedical to nano-technology, to human robotics and revolutionary cures of diseases.

Simultaneously, we can learn of Mars’ violent path, and what celestial onslaught or cosmo-cataclysmic event was responsible for the Red Planet’s death, thus we can apprehend what may be in store for our very own Earth’s future, and mobilize precautions or generate a post-catastrophic plan so that a remnant piece of our global technoculture may survive for posterity’s sake.

2006-12-30 19:41:23 · answer #4 · answered by . 5 · 0 0

The big mystery is whether Mars has or had life on it at any time in its history. Knowing this will tell us a lot about how widespread life, and hence intelligent beings like us, is in the universe. It is enormously difficult to transport humans there, so robots that return some martian soil back to Earth may be our best option.

2006-12-30 15:34:18 · answer #5 · answered by alnitaka 4 · 0 0

I think that Mars is probably the only planet besides Earth that might be able to sustain life.If we can get rid of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by putting plants there, the plants could make oxygen allowing humans to breathe and live.

2006-12-30 16:13:18 · answer #6 · answered by karatechamp2007 1 · 0 0

I think Mars is a beautiful planet to look at with a telescope during opposition. When the sky is clear and still you can see wonderful details on its surface. You can see the polar ice cap, and various interesting shapes amongst the various shades of red on its surface.

2006-12-30 17:22:18 · answer #7 · answered by I don't think so 5 · 0 0

It is a cool red planet, yet USA should pay off a debt before going there.

They should also build a 50 mile bridge connecting Alaska to Russia (North America to Asia) before going to Mars.

2006-12-30 15:31:17 · answer #8 · answered by thmtom 4 · 0 0

Couldn't find any reference of decent hotels and restaurants there on the Michelin guide.
Therefore I am not booking any trip to Mars for the time being.

2006-12-30 16:13:23 · answer #9 · answered by PragmaticAlien 5 · 0 0

I think it is a dead planet, no use to us without domes or other cover to sustain life. Other than that only good for collecting information on what is or might have been there at one time.

2006-12-30 17:26:39 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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