Rock or something else on Mars?

Ok, new question, do you believe earth has been visited by any of said "countless forms" or that the world governments know of their existence and deny that?

I personally believe neither and think it to be a perfectly logical conclusion, I don't however deny the possibility of alien life, just not in our solar system or local area of our galaxy.

I have no idea if the earth has been visited by ET's because I've not found any evidence to suggest it.

Mars could have supported life millions of years ago, and that planet is in our solar system.
 
Ok, new question, do you believe earth has been visited by any of said "countless forms" or that the world governments know of their existence and deny that?

There's tonnes of evidence supporting the existance of ETs including videos (though many are fake) and testomonys of astronauts and millitary personnel.

 
There's tonnes of evidence supporting the existance of ETs including videos (though many are fake) and testomonys of astronauts, millitary personnel.


There is only so far you can stretch the word evidence.

In a lot of the cases the "evidence" of these things is stretched so far it resembles a slinky.
 
CSIMARS.jpg
 
Well, whatever it is, it does look like it landed, though given its size, not with much force.

I would almost guarantee its a rock of some kind, however it could be off-planet debris that has impacted the surface?

Or (more likely) it is a boulder from the top of those rather large mountain type things (i.e. dunes i assume) to either side of the impact area, if it had toppled down and stopped to rest there, that would explain the small impact, there also appears to be evidence of surface disturbance to the left of the image, could be its slippage track covered up (no idea how long it has been there)

Or, its a large rock formation under the surface and that is the top poking out as the sand is eroded from around.

Interesting photo either way, I love lunar and martian photography, its about as surreal as imagery gets imo (when you consider what you are really looking at)
 
Too much speculation about what the thing in that image is will prove to be quite fruitless as we are in a rather difficult position in finding out what it is.

It could be an alien device, it could be a shopped photograph, an odd bit of rock, something we left there? I don't know. You don't know. So therefore, we don't know.

tldr: the government knows but they want to hide it from us because then we'd be outsourcing our call centers to Alpha Centauri.
 
I have no idea if the earth has been visited by ET's because I've not found any evidence to suggest it.

Mars could have supported life millions of years ago, and that planet is in our solar system.

I don't have the evidence for this, it was in a episode of The Universe, but the Earth and Mars formed virtually at the same time 4 billions years ago, from the remnants of a supernova. It is believe that after the collision with our sister planet, that formed the moon, and millions of meteor strikes from left over cluster of rock that didn't form planets, that we became so hot that the planet was liquid rock, and the iron being the heaviest element sank to the centre and formed our core. Mars did not suffer such a violent past and as such, does not have a solid iron core, and as such cannot create a electromagnetic field, meaning it cannot and has never sustained an atmosphere. This means the chance of life on Mars are slim to none.

We are insanely lucky to have so many circumstances that work so well, but in a chaotic universe someone somewhere has to have it good, it just happens to be us.
 

So, some mud in a cup has those properties, but stick them in a microwave and see if life forms. There is no surface water on Mars because it is being bombarded constantly by solar winds that it cannot deflect. That virtually the same as standing in front of a microwave, xray machine and whatnot all at the same time. I didn't say the chances where zero, there is just to much evidence standing in the way of it being a possibility.

The only plausable way life could exist on mars, was if there happened to be underground reservoirs, but there isn't much evidence yet to say if the core of mars is even molten, (as all of its volcanoes, appear to be extinct) so hot enough to melt ice underground.
 
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There is only so far you can stretch the word evidence.

In a lot of the cases the "evidence" of these things is stretched so far it resembles a slinky.

interesting. a stretched out slinky doesn't resemble a slinky... more a bit of long thin metal.

'looks like et has been phoning home' - nice i lol'd
 
I'd hazard that completely by chance they found one of the many probes that have been sent out that way... or whats left of it... the area around it is consistant with a low to medium velocity spill.
 
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