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G=EMC^2 Glazier Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 12:41 am Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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Hagar I don>t mind water found under ground,after all I have red clams
200 feet down. Still its an unknown??? I see lots of frosty carbon
dioxide at the colder north poler,and that is based on Mars atmosphere
is 95% of CO I base my argument on good science You based yours on
Mars has some areas that look like Earth. Reality is Mars looks much
more like our Moon A very dry sandy dusty rock. TreBert |
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Hagar Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 2:54 am Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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"BradGuth" <bradguth@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:59235687-3003-4081-9f78-89d15527ec59@b38g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
[quote]On Oct 15, 10:36 am, herbertglaz...@webtv.net (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Hagar Sand pours just like water. Sand erodes just like water.No water
on Venus but I see lots of erosion. Rust is fine,and abrasive. With
just a 1% atmosphere(no pressure) water molecules would boil away(thin
out) making them so very easy to break apart into their two elements.
Not one molecule of water ever found on Mars,after tests after test over
the years. TreBert Ps Hagar there is no argument the moon is dry,and
has no atmosphere yet it has hills and valleys. How come?
But otherwise Mars is very faith-based failsafe, so that we can safely
spend the next decade and trillions of our hard earned loot without
any chance of running into a carbon based form of life that ever had
need of water.
However, perhaps a billion or less years ago Mars got hit with a few
icy balls, and perhaps even as recently as 12,500 years ago getting
hit by icy debris from encountering the Sirius Oort cloud or that of
more substantial items lost when Sirius B went into its hydrogen shell
flash-over.
~ BG
[/quote]
Sirius B Oort cloud ????????
If that statement wasn>t so ignorant, it>d be almost funny. |
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BradGuth Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 5:40 am Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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On Oct 15, 10:16 pm, "Mark Earnest" <gmearn...@yahoo.com> wrote:
[quote]"G=EMC^2 Glazier" <herbertglaz...@webtv.net> wrote in message
news:28955-48F5F2AC-25@storefull-3334.bay.webtv.net...
Mark Sand and dust storms etched out the Mars surface. They are
observable. they can cover the whole planet. That is a given TreBert
You really think so?
Most of the so called experts speaking about Mars say it does not have
enough wind force to hold up a kite. In spite of the dust storms.
IOW, Bert, do what you do best, and go against "the experts."
[/quote]
Mars is 260 ppm dryer than our moon. That>s 260,000 ppb worse off
than our moon, and there>s no sign of any surface water or ice on our
moon.
~ BG |
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Mark Earnest Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 7:46 am Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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"G=EMC^2 Glazier" <herbertglazier@webtv.net> wrote in message
news:28955-48F5F2AC-25@storefull-3334.bay.webtv.net...
[quote]Mark Sand and dust storms etched out the Mars surface. They are
observable. they can cover the whole planet. That is a given TreBert
[/quote]
You really think so?
Most of the so called experts speaking about Mars say it does not have
enough wind force to hold up a kite. In spite of the dust storms.
IOW, Bert, do what you do best, and go against "the experts." |
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Saul Levy Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 7:46 am Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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What does Sirius have to do with 12,500 years ago, BradBoi? lmfjao!
The Sun has NEVER been this close to Sirius before. And never again
too.
Saul Levy
On Wed, 15 Oct 2008 12:36:25 -0700 (PDT), BradGuth
<bradguth@gmail.com> wrote:
[quote]But otherwise Mars is very faith-based failsafe, so that we can safely
spend the next decade and trillions of our hard earned loot without
any chance of running into a carbon based form of life that ever had
need of water.
However, perhaps a billion or less years ago Mars got hit with a few
icy balls, and perhaps even as recently as 12,500 years ago getting
hit by icy debris from encountering the Sirius Oort cloud or that of
more substantial items lost when Sirius B went into its hydrogen shell
flash-over.
~ BG[/quote] |
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BradGuth Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 2:20 pm Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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On Oct 16, 5:48 am, herbertglaz...@webtv.net (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
[quote]Mark Experts fudge,and when they do I go against them with the reality
of very good science. I think good science. They write books that have
to sell.and put fudge into them I think out of the box,and that gets me
in trouble with the parrots TreBert
[/quote]
Perhaps we need our own fudge, as BHO needs tens of thousands of pink
slips for those soon to be unemployed and essentially unemployable
because of the 10% per year cutbacks throughout federal and state
government.
Of course that makes BHO a prime target, similar to JFK having
intentions of pulling the NASA/Apollo plug before it was too late.
Too bad the young and brightest of us so often have to die before
their time.
Once warrior princes Sara Palin and her republican Mafia is in charge,
things will get back to the status quo norm of America taking
advantage of most every other nation or tribe on Earth, and then once
and for all we can start saving a fortune by simply kissing our frail
environment goodbye.
~ BG |
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BradGuth Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 2:50 pm Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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On Oct 16, 7:21 am, "Hagar" <ha...@sahm.name> wrote:
[quote]"BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:fd85a3d8-4d17-4e62-8d2e-f2519daf4191@c22g2000prc.googlegroups.com...
On Oct 15, 10:16 pm, "Mark Earnest" <gmearn...@yahoo.com> wrote:
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" <herbertglaz...@webtv.net> wrote in message
news:28955-48F5F2AC-25@storefull-3334.bay.webtv.net...
Mark Sand and dust storms etched out the Mars surface. They are
observable. they can cover the whole planet. That is a given TreBert
You really think so?
Most of the so called experts speaking about Mars say it does not have
enough wind force to hold up a kite. In spite of the dust storms.
IOW, Bert, do what you do best, and go against "the experts."
Mars is 260 ppm dryer than our moon. That>s 260,000 ppb worse off
than our moon, and there>s no sign of any surface water or ice on our
moon.
And you know this how ?? Obviously you must have been there, loon.
There are craters at both poles of the Moon which could be full of water
ice, yet that ice will never be exposed to the rays of the Sun. Where does
it come from, you ask ... well, the Kuiper Belt is a veritable deep freeze
storage bin for that stuff and in all likelihood all the water on Earth
originated there.
[/quote]
You are not a topic contributor, but instead a taker and a denier.
The only water on our Selene/moon is that within its bedrock or
sequestered deep within solid basalt, or perhaps deeper within its
unusually low mass core.
A surface vacuum of 3e-15 bar makes surface water ice or even dry ice
extremely unlikely, if not impossible. There>s not even objective
science of water ice coexisting in 1 AU space, much less upon any
solar and Earth heated dark rock that>s within such a vacuum.
Are you suggesting that our physically dark Selene/moon has a
substantial atmosphere in addition to all of its hot sodium?
I suppose there could be a thin layer of radon gas that would turn
liquid by night.
~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG |
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G=EMC^2 Glazier Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 5:48 pm Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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Mark Experts fudge,and when they do I go against them with the reality
of very good science. I think good science. They write books that have
to sell.and put fudge into them I think out of the box,and that gets me
in trouble with the parrots TreBert |
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Hagar Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 7:15 pm Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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"G=EMC^2 Glazier" <herbertglazier@webtv.net> wrote in message
news:4001-48F73802-179@storefull-3333.bay.webtv.net...
[quote]Mark Experts fudge,and when they do I go against them with the reality
of very good science. I think good science. They write books that have
to sell.and put fudge into them I think out of the box,
[/quote]
would that be the 12-pack Bud Lite box treBert .... |
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Saul Levy Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 7:19 pm Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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And with the Nobel Committee, BEERTbrain! lmao!
Saul Levy
On Thu, 16 Oct 2008 08:48:02 -0400, herbertglazier@webtv.net (G=EMC^2
Glazier) wrote:
[quote]Mark Experts fudge,and when they do I go against them with the reality
of very good science. I think good science. They write books that have
to sell.and put fudge into them I think out of the box,and that gets me
in trouble with the parrots TreBert[/quote] |
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Hagar Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 7:21 pm Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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"BradGuth" <bradguth@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:fd85a3d8-4d17-4e62-8d2e-f2519daf4191@c22g2000prc.googlegroups.com...
[quote]On Oct 15, 10:16 pm, "Mark Earnest" <gmearn...@yahoo.com> wrote:
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" <herbertglaz...@webtv.net> wrote in message
news:28955-48F5F2AC-25@storefull-3334.bay.webtv.net...
Mark Sand and dust storms etched out the Mars surface. They are
observable. they can cover the whole planet. That is a given TreBert
You really think so?
Most of the so called experts speaking about Mars say it does not have
enough wind force to hold up a kite. In spite of the dust storms.
IOW, Bert, do what you do best, and go against "the experts."
Mars is 260 ppm dryer than our moon. That>s 260,000 ppb worse off
than our moon, and there>s no sign of any surface water or ice on our
moon.
[/quote]
And you know this how ?? Obviously you must have been there, loon.
There are craters at both poles of the Moon which could be full of water
ice, yet that ice will never be exposed to the rays of the Sun. Where does
it come from, you ask ... well, the Kuiper Belt is a veritable deep freeze
storage bin for that stuff and in all likelihood all the water on Earth
originated there. |
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Hagar Guest
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Posted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 10:50 pm Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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"BradGuth" <bradguth@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:47b9a936-6369-4813-8d84-25935234c087@n33g2000pri.googlegroups.com...
[quote]On Oct 16, 7:21 am, "Hagar" <ha...@sahm.name> wrote:
"BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:fd85a3d8-4d17-4e62-8d2e-f2519daf4191@c22g2000prc.googlegroups.com...
On Oct 15, 10:16 pm, "Mark Earnest" <gmearn...@yahoo.com> wrote:
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" <herbertglaz...@webtv.net> wrote in message
news:28955-48F5F2AC-25@storefull-3334.bay.webtv.net...
Mark Sand and dust storms etched out the Mars surface. They are
observable. they can cover the whole planet. That is a given
TreBert
You really think so?
Most of the so called experts speaking about Mars say it does not have
enough wind force to hold up a kite. In spite of the dust storms.
IOW, Bert, do what you do best, and go against "the experts."
Mars is 260 ppm dryer than our moon. That>s 260,000 ppb worse off
than our moon, and there>s no sign of any surface water or ice on our
moon.
And you know this how ?? Obviously you must have been there, loon.
There are craters at both poles of the Moon which could be full of water
ice, yet that ice will never be exposed to the rays of the Sun. Where
does
it come from, you ask ... well, the Kuiper Belt is a veritable deep
freeze
storage bin for that stuff and in all likelihood all the water on Earth
originated there.
You are not a topic contributor, but instead a taker and a denier.
The only water on our Selene/moon is that within its bedrock or
sequestered deep within solid basalt, or perhaps deeper within its
unusually low mass core.
A surface vacuum of 3e-15 bar makes surface water ice or even dry ice
extremely unlikely, if not impossible. There>s not even objective
science of water ice coexisting in 1 AU space, much less upon any
solar and Earth heated dark rock that>s within such a vacuum.
[/quote]
You are a loon. The Kuiper Belt is oodles of AUs out in space and it is
full of water in its solid state. The Oort Cloud is even further out, up to
2 LYs and it is full of icy bodies, which on occasion careen into the inner
solar neighborhood and manifest themselves as comets. |
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G=EMC^2 Glazier Guest
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Posted: Fri Oct 17, 2008 12:12 am Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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Hagar (the heckler) Bud Light box works well. Does not pay to be sober
in such a rocky world. Trebert |
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Mark Earnest Guest
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Posted: Fri Oct 17, 2008 6:23 am Post subject: Re: Hydrogen Water Red Mars |
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"G=EMC^2 Glazier" <herbertglazier@webtv.net> wrote in message
news:4001-48F73802-179@storefull-3333.bay.webtv.net...
[quote]Mark Experts fudge,and when they do I go against them with the reality
of very good science. I think good science. They write books that have
to sell.and put fudge into them I think out of the box,and that gets me
in trouble with the parrots
[/quote]
Yeah, Bert, not to insult parrots, but that is exactly what the so called
experts are. Nothing on the brain at all.
TreBert
> |
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