Qonfused
Party Escort Bot
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2004
- Messages
- 9,500
- Reaction score
- 6
I for one welcome our new arsenic overlords
Love.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
I for one welcome our new arsenic overlords
But if they find bacterial evidance on Mars or any other planet in our solar system that means that life is everywhere. That means there are alien fish, cats, etc all over the place.
Who knows. So far the only types of life that can survive in extreme conditions are microbial. Maybe that's as far as they can go in those extreme conditions. Doesn't seem like they have evolved to anything past the microbial stage in billions of years so I remain skeptical.
We already know that there are planets in other solar systems that have a very similar atmosphere and temperature to earth. So if we had evidance of life on 2 planets in the same solar system the only rational conclusion you could draw from that is that life is every where in the universe. And considering there are billions of solar systems the odds that life similar to ours is out there would be a pretty much a sure thing.
This is true as well. I hope that's the case. My biggest hope is to witness an actual alien life form that's more complex than bacteria. That would be something extraordinary and really change my perspective about life in general.
That would be something extraordinary and really change my perspective about life in general.
Wolfe-Simon's team took mud containing bacteria from the arsenic-rich Mono Lake and grew them in ever decreasing concentrations of phosphorous. Their rationale was that since arsenic is just below phosphorous in the periodic table, and shares many of its chemical properties and is even used as a source of energy for some bacteria, the bugs would be able to swap one for the other. That is just what happened.
Why and how would it change your perspective?
It's pretty self-explanatory how knowing and witnessing something like that can change ones perspective on life.
I bet you would.
I wouldn't bat an eye lid if we had contact with an alien civilization tomorrow.
For me at least it wouldn't change a damn thing. We've been bombarded so much with such stories in science fiction, that quite honestly I wouldn't bat an eye lid if we had contact with an alien civilization tomorrow.
Only marginally related, but it's not worth its own thread while this one is active:
http://reinep.wordpress.com/2010/11...t-admits-that-pyramids-contain-ufo-technology
28/11/2010 by Ray
Just a nut jobRay Alex Website reveals the secret leadership of the World Conspiracy known as the Illuminati and the Bilderbergs and other`s that constantly cover up the truth. The website contains over hundreds of articles with information including a real alternative reality.
This is true as well. I hope that's the case. My biggest hope is to witness an actual alien life form that's more complex than bacteria. That would be something extraordinary and really change my perspective about life in general.
I'm not really hopeful that will ever happen. I am convinced that advanced life is out there just because of the odds, but I doubt physics will ever allow us to communicate with them.
Yea if we ever get into contact with aliens I think it will be them finding us. Or at least until we develop the technology powerful enough to communicate with them in thousands/millions of years from now granted we survive.
YOU'RE A NUT JOBJust a nut job
Danimal? Is that you?
Honestly though, iwanttobelieveetc and I just can't fathom humans building the Pyramids anymore. The logistics don't make sense.
Do we have an actual explanation for how they built them? I'm not trying to start a fight, I'm asking a serious question.
Do we have an actual explanation for how they built them? I'm not trying to start a fight, I'm asking a serious question.
Actually, the least plausible is that they rolled the stones along using smoothed logs - Egypt is a desert and largely only has date trees, which are a primary food source in said desert. To roll enough stone to make the Great Pyramid, let alone all the others, you'd need several hundred thousand trees, which would destroy the environment and likely cause all the workers to starve.There are many plausible explanations using technologies and knowledge of the times. The LEAST plausible is that they were told how to build them from aliens. WooooaoOoOOOoOoooo.
There are many plausible explanations using technologies and knowledge of the times. The LEAST plausible is that they were told how to build them from aliens. WooooaoOoOOOoOoooo.
Quite a bit of research has been done I think, and people still argue about it. I've seen at least one documentary on it, showing all kinds of ingenious shit going on. The innards of the pyramids aren't just solid stone, there are all sorts of internal structures that were built solely to help them build the rest of the pyramid. I forget the details, but I'm pretty sure the great pyramid has a massive ramp inside it for transporting blocks or something.