Question:

Would you believe that there is a possible life existence on mars?

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Cause.. I read it from yahoo news.. and it said there that the planet mars was able to fill up the requirements of life existence out there...They also found ice on the planet.... Here's my question.... WOULD YOU BY ANY CHANCE LIKE O TRANSFER TO ANOTHER PLANET?

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12 ANSWERS


  1. No at present it is too cold for plants to grow so it would be impossible for oxygen breathers to make it.


  2. I would love to visit, but wouldn't want to move there.

  3. No,i don't think because the ozone layer of Mars was  destroyed much before, & thus the UV radiation must be destroying every living body , it is acceptable for the organisms which can survive under radiation.

  4. No, but i think we should set up a station there and eventually cover the plant in micro-algae, and once an atmosphere is developed it will be warmer, and more can be done, until eventually there will be life supporting conditions.

  5. I solve all my problems by putting my friends in blocks of cement

    I think you should to

  6. chances of intelligent life on mars is quite slim as the conditions there don't suit life. Ice on the polls suggests that there could be life but not intelligent, like single celled organisms, and no. I don't want to live on mars

  7. No I wouldn't go there . . .my heating bills would be atrocious ! ! !

    Not to mention the number of oxygen tanks i would need . . lol

  8. Personally, no.  This one suits me pretty well.  But I do believe that Mars might have supported life in some form during the not so distant past.  There's pretty clear evidence of water, and I'm still not convinced that some of the bizarre "landforms" aren't artifical.  Forget "the face on Mars" for a moment, look at "the city" nearby.  There's a 5-sided pyramid and clusters of geometric "structures" with too many straight lines to not be worth a closer look.  The planet's got many enigmatic features, including a pair of moons that don't make a whole lot of sense from an astrophysical perspective, but would as artificial or terraformed satellites.

  9. i would like to have a vacation there but i would never live there cuz' i'd miss concepcion,my family, friends and you.haha

    gawin mo qng best answer kala mo.

  10. yes when our magnetic field switches again

  11. In addition, on comcast, NASA said that they put some soil in the chem lab and they said it was almost exactly the same as the dirt in your backyard! They even said that we could grow asparagus in it! I would say there is a good chance that there was life on Mars, but probably not now.

  12. No, I wouldn't want to just eat asparagus for the rest of my life :)

    Seriously though, I think Mars sucks and I don't want to go there.  It can't support life and I think NASA is being pretty g*y right now, spending billions on digging up Martian soil when we're on the verge of a frickin' oil crisis (among other crises just waiting to rear their ugly heads) and we could be spending that money on alternative energy research.

    I mean, let's say for instance that Phoenix was digging in the soil and found a freaking PRIMITIVE MARTIAN FOSSIL, putting to rest all questions as to whether there was life on Mars.  Well... so what?  What is that going to change?  Is it going to fill your gas tank?  Would you wake up the next day and say to yourself, "Hmm, the economy is in the gutter, but that's okay because I know there was at one time life on Mars!"?  I sincerely doubt it.  And please excuse my tone, I'm speaking to all who think the Mars missions are a good way to spend taxpayer money.

    Anyway, the answer is no, I wouldn't like to transfer to Mars.  Maybe if they found a planet that was like earth was 6,000 years ago (you know, clean air, lots of plants and things), I might transfer there.

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