Mars Had Surface Water for Eons
LukePieStalker writes "Far from being a one-time event, it now appears that surface water
flowed on Mars for eons. Nasa has announced that, after descending
down further into the Endurance crater, the Opportunity rover has found a 'razorback'. It is believed that this was formed by 'fracture fill' from the minerals in percolating water. Since this feature extends through several geologic layers, it argues for a long period of wetness near the surface. This would seem to substantially increase the chance that life once existed on the red planet."
To me, that's the only concrete proof of life on Mars. Life is complex--there's more to it than water.
I are winner
The problem is that the rovers are not equipped to be able to tell how old these rocks are - nor is it likely that any rovers any time soon will be able to do this sort of work. Labs that do radioisotope separation don't easily fit all of the categories ("small", "lightweight", "robust", and "self sufficient"), needed to send things to other planets. A sample return is a much more likely course before we can start dating these rocks.
Now, we can tell *relative* dates fairly easily with these rovers, but absolute dates are going to be a problem just using the rovers. There are some cases where you don't need radioisotopic dating, but I doubt they'll prove very useful here.
Windmills do not work that way!
"I don't quite see the obession with finding life on Mars."
I do. But then I'm a scientist. I want to know stuff. I want to know as much as possible, and have other people in other fields find out as much as possible, because you never know what good things that can improve the quality of life can come of it. And actually, that last part is justification so that society will continue funding my research. Mostly, I just want to know stuff. It's why I became a scientist.
Also: because that's what humans do. They explore. They want to know their environment. I could probably come up with a decent hypothesis regarding cognitive dissonance driving humans' desire to decrease the number of unknowns in their environment in order to maximize their comfort level and probability of survival. But then that's the other thing I do as a scientist. Come up with hypotheses. Fact is, for whatever reason, or maybe no reason other than evolutionarily determined hard wiring in the brain, it's what people do.
Anyone not interested is free to focus their attention elsewhere. And dollars to donuts they themselves will have something like this that drives them that other people may not understand.
I'm sure you're right, that some people would use such a discovery as proof for and/or against some religious viewpoint. Hell, they did it with rock and roll music, and pretty much anything you can think of that they can use as leverage against each other in their power games. Good for them. Everyone needs a hobby, it gives them purpose in life, and it keeps them out of my hair.
"I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B