|
Post by John Titor on Sept 15, 2020 1:52:52 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Telso on Sept 15, 2020 3:06:52 GMT 10
It would be really ironic that humanity would have spent decades trying to spot life on Mars and beyond in the universe to only find it first on our closest neighboring planet in the solar system.
goodbants likes this
|
|
|
Post by Early2010sGuy on Sept 15, 2020 8:34:11 GMT 10
It would be really ironic that humanity would have spent decades trying to spot life on Mars and beyond in the universe to only find it first on our closest neighboring planet in the solar system. There might be once a living bacteria in Mars, and Titan, Saturn's moon, also, it is theorized that membranes could be made in Titan
|
|
|
Post by SharksFan99 on Sept 15, 2020 11:24:09 GMT 10
I'm skeptical about there being life on Venus (its a "believe it when I see it" thing for me), but with that being said, there have been very few probes which have successfully landed on the planet due to its hot, dense atmosphere. We know very little about what is on the surface of Venus, let alone what bacteria may be living within its atmosphere. It's definitely an interesting discovery nonetheless.
Cassie likes this
|
|
|
Post by kev2000sfan on Sept 15, 2020 12:41:48 GMT 10
Bacteria isn't new. I want to see a type of ants or new life that look like a meerkat that stand on two legs.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
|
0 |
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 15, 2020 21:15:41 GMT 10
Our solar system is actually teeming with carbon-based life, it’s just Earth that has multicellular and other advanced beings though. Or at least sentient, multicellular, or otherwise advanced life in a form that we recognize.
It may sound crazy, but the reason our search has been fruitless may simply be because we can’t conceive of any form of life that isn’t carbon-based; advanced life forms may be based on silicon, or hydrogen; we could simply not recognize an alien life form because it doesn’t come in the form of flesh and blood but rather a color or a smell. Stranger things have happened.
|
|