Mars Soil Appears To Be Able To Sustain Life
beckerist writes "Scientists working on the Phoenix Mars Lander mission, which has already found ice on the planet, said preliminary analysis by the lander's instruments on a sample of soil scooped up by the spacecraft's robotic arm had shown it to be much more alkaline than expected. Sam Kounaves, the lead investigator for the wet chemistry laboratory on Phoenix, told journalists: 'It is the type of soil you would probably have in your back yard, you know, alkaline. You might be able to grow asparagus in it really well. ... It is very exciting for us.'"
Seeing as I always thought asparagus was from Mars, I am not all that surprised.
So I guess this means god may have created life on Mars as well!
Wonder how thoroughly they disinfected the Mars landers before launch. The Earth has a rich soil and subterranean ecosystem so even if Mars has no ozone layer, there are plenty of hospitable places where a microbe could live. And of course, there would not be any natural predators to keep an invasive species in check. Just think, NASA may just have conducted their boldest experiment ever.
Statesman
In Japanese the chemistry term for base (vs acid) is "enki" which means "salty material". Salts make the soil basic.
I know this comment won't be popular, but so be it.
Another reason to believe the universe was designed. What are the chances of our planetary neighbor being able to support plant life?