the question should be, should we establish a colony on Mars?
--Mister he he, ha ha
didn't you learn anything from Total Recall?!
2007-04-05 00:34:01
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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basically north of the Margaritifer Sinus is a shallow around melancholy on the equator. it is not a crater, so it has speedy get right of entry to the two south to Valles Marineris and north to Chryse Planitia. that's on the factor of the Viking I and the Pathfinder landing web content. the section is amazingly low, being extra desirable than 4 km below "sea point" on Mars, meaning that relative air density would be enormously greater. Mars is humorous that way. It has a sort of spidery canyons and cliffsides, so looking a region which gets the main sunlight lots of the time, should not be too stressful. ability is existence and you'd be construction some greenhouses to pass collectively with your image voltaic panels. isn't Schiaparelli that nutter that theory he observed canals on Mars? Yikes. Uh... basically say "between Argyre and Chryse" Is your instructor a nutter, too? we've actual maps, you already know.
2016-12-15 16:43:14
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answer #2
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answered by gagliano 4
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Not any time soon.
First, we have to get to Mars.
Then we have to be able to survive in a place much more hostile than many places on Earth that are not inhabited because they are too hostile. Until we can have colonies in the harshest deserts and the south pole on Earth we will not be able to have them on Mars.
2007-04-05 02:28:57
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answer #3
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answered by campbelp2002 7
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I doubt if we could afford that. Mars does not have the landscape or the atmosphere to support carbon based life forms, so there would need to be artificial environments set up to furnish good conditions for people to live there. Besides, it's not the most attractive place to visit and marketing for tourism would be wracking their brains to come up with something to encourage visitors to "see the Red Planet"
2007-04-05 00:47:47
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Is that a King Size Mars bar?
2007-04-05 00:31:09
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Ya know, it is all interesting and stuff, but I just really wishe they would start finding cures and answers to the real issues we are all facing. Cancer, Aids, Homeless, Starved, un-employed, the things that really matter in life. Is life on Mars going to take care of that, cause if so they should have thought about that a long time ago.
2007-04-05 00:41:12
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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No, too expensive.
2007-04-05 00:31:33
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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yes, but it's not gonna be easy.
2007-04-05 10:30:54
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answer #8
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answered by neutron 3
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