Cape Town - We might all have been living on Mars – or at least, some sort of creatures a bit like us could have been living there.
That’s because when the planets of our solar system were still young, a few billion years ago, Mars was also a “Goldilocks” planet not unlike Earth – not too hot, not too cold, and with plenty of life-supporting water in liquid form flowing in rivers and emptying into lakes and
shallow seas.
A thick atmosphere of carbon dioxide blanketed Mars and kept it warm, creating conditions where microbes may have thrived as they did on Earth.
But that’s not how things continued there, says Dr. Tony Phillips, the production editor of the US space agency’s online news service, Science@NASA.
EARTH " X " ZONE
(We Report. You Decide)......
For more updates, fallow us:
www.facebook.com/earthXzone
https://plus.google.com/+earthXzone
www.earthXzone.blogspot.in/
www.twitter.com/earthXzone ©earthXzone
No comments:
Post a Comment