Did life begin on Mars?

LOL!

I just read that news piece today and then saw Michael's link.

I'm wondering how the God-group is taking this theory ... I would imagine we'll see Westboro Baptist Church protesting NASA and MIT next ...

westboro1.jpg
 
Westboro Baptist Church hasn't got the slightest understanding of God.
Or evolution. Or compassion. Or prayer.

As for the article, don't get too excited.
For every theory that becomes well established there are dozens that fall to the scientific version of the cutting room floor.
 
Westboro Baptist Church hasn't got the slightest understanding of God.
Or evolution. Or compassion. Or prayer.

Very true.

As for the article, don't get too excited.
For every theory that becomes well established there are dozens that fall to the scientific version of the cutting room floor.

That's true in a sense, but also we have to remember that for something to be given the label "theory" in the scientific world it has to have already passed many qualifying barriers. Now if you said that many hypotheses fell to the cutting-room floor I'd be in total agreement.
 
Yes, but the media, who should be more careful with language, tend to use theory when they should say hypothesis.
They think we can't tell the difference.

I've just reread the original post and the words 'hypothesis', 'theory' and 'hypothetical' are all used.

In an email to the Los Angeles Times, Chris McKay, a scientist at NASA Ames Research Center, said this part of Benner's hypothesis is not as simple as Benner suggests.

While McKay agrees that molybdenum needs oxygen, and that most of the early Earth did not have oxygen, he believes there were areas of the Earth that did have some oxygen.

"Many years ago I wrote a paper in which we stated: 'The abiotic production of atmospheric oxidants could have provided a mechanism by which locally oxidizing conditions were sustained within spatially confined habitats,'" he wrote. "So molybdenum may have been available on the early Earth just locally not globally," he wrote.

A Mars start for life might also solve the water paradox, he said, because back when life was first forming, Mars had areas of dry land and areas covered by water. Indeed, NASA's Curiosity rover has found evidence of water on Mars and evidence that the planet was once hospitable for life.

So, did Benner's talk provide conclusive evidence that life started on Mars? No. But he did provide evidence to support his theory.
He also adds that although he thinks life could have started on Mars, he's glad it is now thriving on Earth.

"It's lucky that we ended up here, as certainly Earth has been the better of the two planets for sustaining life," he said in a statement. "If our hypothetical Martian ancestors had remained on Mars, there might not have been a story to tell."
The last reference - hypothetical - is from the scientist putting it forward.
 


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