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Not reporting is bourgeois


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NASA’s mars rover named “perseverance” was strolling along the remains of a billion-something old lake. Perseverance captured photos of rocks containing materials identical to archae bacterial fossils. Scientists from and out of nasa used the photos and also samples from these rocks to test for other possibilities over why these rocks had those materials. All explanations found so far yielded nothing and right now, the remaining hypothesis most agree on is that this now deceased lake once contained life mainly because it’s the most plausible explanation. However, if this is true, then we know for sure that life on mars is dead and that no other life in the universe has been detected.

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>>710289
Dude weed lmao

>>710289
This is just confirmation on long known facts about Mars being able to sustain life in its ancient oceans.

>>710289
>However, if this is true, then we know for sure that life on mars is dead
Retarded opinion considering that Earth has life living among rocks 20km deep.

>>710291
Yes, but from the looks of it, nothing shows that that life ever reached the complex/multicellular stage of evolution

>>710293
Life hasnt been multicellular for at least 3,5 billion years on Earth.

>>710293
You can emulate it and create your own life, like the aspiration to make homunculus if you want aliens so bad, you just need to convince humanity to not be religious retards and 100% pour their sources and ability into development.

>>710294
That reply was not necessary

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>>710289
>tfw u die on mars n the ape uyghas sample ur microbiota trillion yrs later n reverse engineer it

>>710291
Being able to sustain life does not equal ever having life. Cool news.

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>>710290
>>710289
There is evidence that cannabis is not native to the earth. It is the only plant in existence that displays its gender physically. You also have the fact that cannabis just appears out of nowhere in the fossil record and history about 12000 years ago. there are no evolutionary predecessors to be found. also, cannabis dna structure is unique from any other plant. the closest genetic relative that can be found on the planet is…the strawberry! Also, Take a look at the word cannabis. Ever wonder what it means? Cannabis is a Greek word, though its root is African. In Greek, canna means ‘canine’ or ‘dog’ and bis or bi is the number two. So cannabis is the ‘two dog plant’! That in itself is interesting to me. But the pot thickens.



There is a cannabis-loving tribe in Mali, West Africa called the Dogon tribe. A fairly well-documented group, the Dogons were visited by Herodotus, a Greek traveler and chronicler, around 300 BC. He was fortunate enough to

have visited the Dogons during a year-long celebration that took place every 50 years. Explaining their celebration, the Dogons pointed to the brightest star in the Winter sky, Sirius, and said it was the ‘Two-Dog Star’ and that it was the home of the ‘two-dog plant’, cannabis. The two-dog plant, they said, was brought to our planet from the Goddess from the Two Dog Star. Their yearlong celebration was in honor of that star.



All of this would be easy to dismiss if not for the fact the Dogons possessed specific knowledge about the Sirian system for thousands of years before scientists with modern telescopes and equipment could catch up and prove them right. The Dogons had specific knowledge about Sirius B, a white dwarf star, which they call Po Tolo. They knew that it was white, that it was extremely small, and that its the heaviest star in its grouping. They were able to describe its elliptical orbit with Sirius A, its 50 year orbital period, and the fact that the star rotated on its own axis. Sirius B is invisible to the naked eye abd is so difficult to observe, even through a telescope, no pictures were taken until 1970.



They also described a third star in the Sirius system, which they called Emme Ya. In 1995, when two French astronomers published the results of a multi-year study that was apparently a small, red dwarf star within the Sirius star system, the Dogon idea of there being a Sirius C, aka Emme Ya, was suddenly taken much more seriously. If the Dogons were correct in all of their other knowledge about Sirius, why would they not be dead on with their claims of cannabis being from Sirius. It is, after all, named after that “Two-Dog Star’



Note: The Dog Star was highly venerated in ancient Mesopotamia, where its old Akkadian name was Mil-lik-ud (Dog Star Of the Sun) and in Babylonia, where it was called Kakkab-lik-ku (Star Of The Dog). The assyrians called Sirius Kal-bu-sa mas (the Dog of the Sun) and in Chaldea, it was known as Kak-shisha (The Dog Star That Leads)

>>710289
>we know for sure that life on mars is dead

Not necessarily. There could be life deep underground, or at the poles. But yes, I imagine life is common in the universe, but it's mostly microbial. Life appeared early on Earth but remained small until about 5 minutes ago geologically speaking.

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>>710289
If we actually found evidence of life on Mars, the implications would be quite dire. Life might actually be much more common in the universe than originally thought, this pushes solutions to the fermi paradox more into the great filters hypothesis territory

>>710292
Where?

>>710299
>It is the only plant in existence that displays its gender physically.
uygha don't know about flowers

Space isn’t as sterile as the average person thinks it is. Earth’s atmosphere loses about 50k tonnes annualy, that includes clumps of biomass that can protect simple single cellular lifeforms for decades, letting them hitchhike between planets inside of a solar system, and when it comes down to travel even larger distances, then asteroids could spread bacteria hiding below the surface.

>>710301
Don’t worry. We all thought of that idea already

>>710305
What's a little redundant post amongst friends every now and then?

>>710289
aren't you exaggerating a little bit

>>710307
Not really. Life existing at some point on mars is currently the most plausible hypothesis for those rock samples being present near a once thriving lake on that planet given the composition of those samples. Reminder, other organizations outside of nasa already tried searching for other possibilities and came out with nothing.

>MUH ALIENNNNNNNNNNSSSS
no one gives a shit.
we're alone in the universe.
seethe harder.

This is an op though, NASA people are basically begging for money so they can keep on with the projects that have been on the rails for years or even decades and that are endangered by the current administration cutting all of the funding. In this case for the sample return program.

At least the people who were complaining about spending money on useless science and knowledge must be happy now that NASA has been DOGED. Me I think it sucks that we will probably have to wait years for China to catch up in order to get mars rocks to analyze.

Anything to distract from those file huh

>>710309
It worth it just to break young earth creationists brains

>>710301

Didn't take a crazy amount of time for multicellular life to emerge? That's a great filter right there. That or interstellar travel is prohibitively difficult/timeconsuming/resource intensive.

>>710309
>we're alone in the universe
You want to know how much of our own galaxy we've searched for intelligent life so far?
It's the tiny blue dot on this image.

There could be thousands or millions of intelligent alien civilisations in our galaxy alone, but because we haven't heard from any within the radius of that blue dot in just roughly half a century you want to rule out the possibility of it at all?
That is not scientific thinking.

>>710314
Who cares? Contact with alien civilizations is impossible, the universe is getting bugger every day so we’re effectively alone if not literally

>>710311
Reptilian aliens sex traffic little grey aliens, cosmic pedos

>>710313
Life on earth is about 4 billion years old, the universe itself is about 14 billion years old and heat death is expected to occur something like over a hundred trillions years from now, so life emerged extremely early in the life of the universe actually. Another answer to the fermi paradox is that we're actually one of the first intelligent lifeforms in our Galaxy

The hard barrier for ftl travel seems like a good answer as well tho

Do you think Posadas was right in believing only a Communist society could reach the technological capacity for interstellar travel?

>>710318
Interstellar travel is neither possible nor desirable

>>710319
Yeah? And what should we do when the Sun swallows the Earth?

>>710320
presumably, something possible and desirable. trying in vain to break the laws of physics won't help, you might as well fund a manifesting program where wizards wish really hard.

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>>710299
>It is the only plant in existence that displays its gender physically.

very funny that the first piece of evidence you give is complete bullshit lmao


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