Free Associating On The Surface Of Mars 55
jdaily writes "Apparently, while NASA scientists are busy analyzing the more than 10 gigabits of data returned by the rovers thus far, earnest space enthusiasts are dissecting the images and reporting discoveries of fossils, letters of the alphabet, and a white bunny. The 'Net really needs a kook hall of fame."
Hall of fame (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hall of fame (Score:5, Informative)
Back in the day, Donna Kossy [pacifier.com] was always the first person to turn to for this sort of thing. She's still around, if you are looking for this sort of stuff in dead [pacifier.com] tree [pacifier.com] format [pacifier.com].
If you look around, you can find a couple of good [ratbags.com] sites [badastronomy.com] around that carry the torch.
Look and Ye shall find (Score:5, Insightful)
.
Re:Look and Ye shall find (Score:2, Funny)
Shouldn't that be godly?
Re:Look and Ye shall find (Score:2)
Re:spirit/opportunity (Score:2, Interesting)
Good talent for understatement you have there
Re:spirit/opportunity (Score:2, Informative)
You have to remmember that the surface of mars is at a nice -81 F (-63 C) and there is no oxygen [enchantedlearning.com]
, so an internal combustion or any other "burning" propellant to produce motion is out of the question. You're stuck with either bringing your own energy [space.com], or having to rely on solar cells to power your vehicle.
Not everything that works so well on Earth will work on other planets. I'd recommend reading a part of this article (search for "thermal expansion" and read that paragraph).
Re:spirit/opportunity (Score:1, Informative)
"A Kook Hall of Fame" (Score:5, Funny)
I thought that's what Slashdot was for.
-b
PS. Joke, not a troll. Get it?
Post pictures (Score:5, Interesting)
-Sean
Re:Post pictures (Score:1)
And the most likely explaination would be that it was caused by one of the rovers.
However, if you can somehow prove it wasn't created by something human-made, then ill listen.
The ancients did it (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The ancients did it (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The ancients did it (Score:2)
Disclaimer Needed (Score:5, Funny)
If you haven't read the article, do not do so while consuming a beverage. I think someone owes me a keyboard.
Re:Disclaimer Needed (Score:2)
Life on the Moon? (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to see all sorts of things in the rocky landscape. A lot of the things I saw looked liked gremlins to me, which featured prominently in my nightmares. Now that I look back on it, putting the mural on the wall was maybe not a good idea.
At least I had the sense to realize that it was just my imagination. I never once thought there was anything actually living on the Moon.
Re:Life on the Moon? (Score:1)
If it was the same one I had then it wasn't real. I noticed that the picture of the earth was "north is up," but with most of the lunar landing taking place near the moon's equator and the earth being so close to the horizon north would be sideways.
I believe it was a picture of the earth taken by an Apollow crew en route and then pasted onto a picture of a reasonable-l
Actually, the fossil picture is pretty interesting (Score:5, Informative)
Check it out: Granted, it's probably just a tire track, or something, but, last I checked, they hadn't outlawed armchair quarterbacking...
Re:Actually, the fossil picture is pretty interest (Score:4, Insightful)
But no real "fossil" could be obliterated by rolling over in, in Martian gravity no less. The same thing promoting righteous outrage proves that it wasn't a rock in the first place. Even if it "broke up", you'd still see pieces.
Mars isn't the moon, it has an atmosphere; if it broke completely into dust when subjected to such a small force, it would have long since weathered to nothing. A fossil would have to be a rock that has survived millions or billions of years already; rolling over it isn't going to do any more then the wind that would have 'exposed' it, as it would have blown right away with the surrounding dirt.
Right. (Score:1)
Right - it was probably just an impression made in the dust by the tire.
Nevertheless, it is a curious little impression, isn't it?
And remember, if there really is [or was] "life" on Mars, we do not necessarily have any clue what it [or its "fossilized" remnants] might be [or have been] made of. Hell, we might not even have an adequate definition of just what "it" is, or was [prions, anyone?].
Re:Right. (Score:4, Insightful)
I mention this mostly because it's a common fallacy, that some amount of non-knowlege implies total non-knowlege. As soon as you say it, it sounds stupid and is obviously false, but it sneaks up on a lot of people, and is the foundation of entire pervasive modern philosophies. (It is, for instance, an essential philosophical foundation of Strong Post-Modernism.) I do not and can not know everything about the putative fossil on Mars but I can determine some things and make certain observations with great confidence, including observations that lead to the conclusion that it isn't a fossil.
Fallacy (Score:2)
This is mildly OT, but is there an accepted name fot this fallacy? I want to shoot one, have it stuffed, and mount it over my fireplace.
mod parents funny (Score:1, Funny)
Actually it can't be a tire track (Score:2, Insightful)
Definitely not that... (Score:3, Informative)
If you notice the raw image names given, they begin with:
1M131201699EFF
1M131212854EFF 1------------- Opportunity
-M------------ Microscopic Imager
--iiiiiiiii--- Time taken, unsigned integer seconds since ?MEpoch?...
-----------EFF Full-Frame 'EDR' (not linearized)
#man meredr [nasa.gov]
So those two images are both 'microscopic.'
Tire tracks? Did Opportunity goof off and play with som
Re:Actually, the fossil picture is pretty interest (Score:2)
If I was something like those artifacts on Earth, the first thing I'd think of was that I'd jus
Re:Actually, the fossil picture is pretty interest (Score:2)
Couldn't be a tire track - too small, and not whre they drove.
On the other hand, it could be lots of things other than a fossil. This Hoagland person is the grand high poobah of wishful thinking.
Beagle is there! (Score:2, Funny)
Diet Rite and Powdered Cocoa (Score:5, Funny)
<knowing chuckle
Yes, Officer... (Score:1)
Re:Diet Rite and Powdered Cocoa (Score:2)
Or even the insane sum of $0 for a shareware copy of PSP.
That's it? (Score:2, Funny)
Carl Sagan (Score:4, Insightful)
"The universe is not required to be in perfect harmony with human ambition." (from Billions and Billions, iirc)
Whether it's little green men, intelligent design or gun control, people have a tendency to shape their arguments (and distort the facts) to reflect their desire for how they would like the universe (world, society, whatever) to operate, without regard for how it actually functions. I think it's our greatest failure as a species.
Re:Carl Sagan (Score:3, Interesting)
There has been much research into stereotyping from this angle - that is, People take ambiguous data (Suzie is good at Math and Reading but has trouble with English and Science) and generalize to positive or negative impressions of this person's academic achi
Re:The Great Watch Maker (Score:1)
Sheesh!
No intelligent life down here (Score:4, Funny)
After reading the article, I'm left wondering if there's intelligent life on our own planet.
You killed the bunny wabbit! (Score:2, Funny)
First road-kill on another planet. Another first for Opportunity!
I guess my mind is messin' with me also. I did see something that looked just like a miniture pair of eyeglasses in one photo. Maybe they belonged to the bunny, like the nearsighted Captain Kangor
plonk.com (Score:3, Informative)
The site for display and archive of awards for kooks on usenet is at plonk.com. The associated newsgroup is alt.usenet.kooks (warning: excessive signal to noise ratio, even for usenet). The award relevant to the article, the finding of artifacts on Mars, would be the Victor Von Frankenstein Weird Science Award. The drawback here is the requirement that the kookishness be on usenet, a holdover from when that was pretty much the entire public part of the net (before WWW). Anything that appeared strictly on web sites wouldn't qualify.
Fine... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Fine... (Score:1)
UFO on Mars (Score:3, Interesting)
White bunny? (Score:1)
Where are the pictures??? (Score:1)
Enough of this intellegent talk (Score:2)
Did it have any painted eggs with it?
How about small, colored, sugary spheroids?
Was it munching a carrot?
Looking for life in all the wrong places (Score:1)