Now that NASA has discovered water beneath the surface of Mars, approximately 10 kilometers deep, should we dare to tap into it? Where there is water, there could be life-perhaps even hostile life. Should we arm ourselves with enough medicine and weapons to fend off any deadly bacteria or nightmarish creatures that might crawl out from the depths?
@@xh3598 Humans will do it anyway. Curiosity drives us so we can learn. I'm thinking... Elon already has experience in drilling, The Boring Company so he'll get that done. That reservoir could be Outpost 1
@@0xmoo a phone n a space ship is totally different they can't even land on the moon without having actual pictures of the moon without doing art work to the moon . ? For us to believe? What's with all the art work on the planets 🪐
If Mars’ shale rock porosity versus depth can be estimated from seismic data, as it can on Earth, (google: “Sediment dewatering in the Macran accretionary prism”) , then one can also determine Mars’ rock-forming mechanism and geothermal gradient, as can be done on Earth (google “Proposed Method for Shale Compaction Kinetics”)
Scientist did not say a word about life on Mars, besides the water is very deep, extremely did, no way to dig to it Scientist said not one word about life on Mars.
Here's a thought. How deep are Martian lavatubes? Could a lavatube descend the 20 kilometers needed to reach the underground ocean? Then there would be little or no drilling to do.
Eu acho quando coletarem material das luas de Marte vão saber da verdade sobre Marte. Na minha opinião também, acho que o vale marinellis é a melhor opção para encontrar esse rio subterrâneo que se desloca abaixo da crosta marciana.
Who cares? And? What’s your point? Finding life on another body other than Earth would be the crowning pinnacle of human achievement, and change everything about how we perceive the universe.
I can provide the NASA Scientists some water if they come to India, that too free of cost. On a serious note, I wonder if water is available at a 10m depth at some areas on Mars.
Now that NASA has discovered water beneath the surface of Mars, approximately 10 kilometers deep, should we dare to tap into it? Where there is water, there could be life-perhaps even hostile life. Should we arm ourselves with enough medicine and weapons to fend off any deadly bacteria or nightmarish creatures that might crawl out from the depths?
I wanna see some Martian fish. Why is it so hard to see any life forms outside earth? Not expecting much. Maybe some amoeba or plankton like creature...why 8 million species on earth evolved out of nothing but absolutely zero species elsewhere??
Plenty of money to go around, the problem is it's badly given out. Space exploration should be funded much more than it is, so much of our technology we use on earth was from experiments in space and understanding physics and life better. If we wanna progress as a species then space exploration has to happen.