Life?
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- Darkbee
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I hate to be a pessimist but it'll probably end up being something like scientists now agree that meteorite ALH84001 does contain remnants of bacteria after all.
I guess that'd still be pretty profound as it would mean life once existed on Mars, but not really little green men type life we might be hoping for.
I guess that'd still be pretty profound as it would mean life once existed on Mars, but not really little green men type life we might be hoping for.
- Smivs
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Although the news has been locked down, strong rumours suggest that NASA have discovered Bacteria with very alien DNA, based on Arsenic rather than the usual Phosphorus. It was found on Earth, but opens up a whole new range of possibilities for extraterrestrial life.
Truly fascinating, but sadly still no green bug-eyed monsters.
Truly fascinating, but sadly still no green bug-eyed monsters.
Commander Smivs, the friendliest Gourd this side of Riedquat.
- Killer Wolf
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whatever happened to the sewer alien :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQmFWYWqTZA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQmFWYWqTZA
...and keep it under lightspeed!
Friendliest Meteor Police that side of Riedquat
Far Arm ships
Z-ships
Baakili Far Trader
Tin of SPAM
Friendliest Meteor Police that side of Riedquat
Far Arm ships
Z-ships
Baakili Far Trader
Tin of SPAM
Meh, IIRC those news were first published about 2 years ago.
Still, Nasa's press conference should do a good job of rekindling interest in unusual life forms, wich can't be bad!
Still, Nasa's press conference should do a good job of rekindling interest in unusual life forms, wich can't be bad!
Hey, free OXPs: farsun v1.05 & tty v0.5! :0)
- ClymAngus
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Very little, but I thought the comedic value might give them a bit of a laugh on an otherwise slow day.snork wrote:But what does that have to do with exo-biology ?Given that the vast majority of the matter needed for galaxies to be "as they are" (eg gravitationally) is not visible (dark matter) and the founding moments of the universe involved a battle of annihilation between matter and antimatter. Might there possibly be a relationship between the two?
As in a product from that annihilation event that has left a hither too undetectable (yet gravitationally significant) particle/residue?
I realise that given the ratio of anti-matter to matter at the beginning of the universe and comparing it to the necessary dark matter needed to mirror "what we see" are fairly diverse but you know; laymen + ideas = dumb questions.
- Disembodied
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xkcd's take:
"According to a new paper published in the journal Science, reporters are unable to thrive in an arsenic-rich environment."
"According to a new paper published in the journal Science, reporters are unable to thrive in an arsenic-rich environment."
- Commander McLane
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