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MARS OUTCROP SOURCE OF TINY SPHERES
JPL ^
| sol 13, opportunity, mars
| JPL
Posted on 02/07/2004 7:56:00 AM PST by Fitzcarraldo
TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: mars; opportunity; spirit
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To: Piltdown_Woman
ping
To: Fitzcarraldo
A Martian that lost his marbles?
To: Fitzcarraldo
4
posted on
02/07/2004 8:00:25 AM PST
by
dead
(I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
To: Erik Latranyi
That eludium pew-38 is sure plentiful, ain't it?
5
posted on
02/07/2004 8:01:33 AM PST
by
RandallFlagg
(<a href="http://www.michaelmoore.com" target="_blank">miserable failure)
To: Fitzcarraldo
6
posted on
02/07/2004 8:02:29 AM PST
by
martin_fierro
(Oriental by Occident)
To: Fitzcarraldo
Nice. Thanks for posting it.
7
posted on
02/07/2004 8:02:57 AM PST
by
EggsAckley
(..................**AMEND** the Fourteenth Amendment......(There, is THAT better?).................)
To: Fitzcarraldo
Too cool! I am thinking lithophysae also. But perfectly rounded?
8
posted on
02/07/2004 8:10:01 AM PST
by
doodad
To: Fitzcarraldo
FINALLY, a source for Unobtanium!
9
posted on
02/07/2004 8:10:25 AM PST
by
adam_az
(Be vewy vewy qwiet, I'm hunting weftists.)
To: Fitzcarraldo
" The conventional wisdom during the early part of the century was that these pisoliths were formed by the action of algae growing over the surface of fine grains. The grains became larger as the algae facilitated chemical precipitation of lime (calcium carbonate) and/or the capture of fine sediments. As the grains were rolled around by moving water, growth would take place on all sides producing a somewhat spherical pisolith."
Means life or water?...
To: Erik Latranyi
Nah, they're the zits on the face on Mars.
11
posted on
02/07/2004 8:13:56 AM PST
by
Paul Atreides
(Is it really so difficult to post the entire article?)
To: Fitzcarraldo
It's GOLD! Gold I tell yuh!! GOLD!!!
To: Fitzcarraldo
Pretty neat!
Is there some frickin' reason we can't get a color pic of this from NASA? I want to see the layering (and everything else) in color.
13
posted on
02/07/2004 8:14:50 AM PST
by
Frank_Discussion
(May the wings of Liberty never lose a feather!)
To: Fitzcarraldo
That looks like a dry creek bed.
14
posted on
02/07/2004 8:15:19 AM PST
by
painter
To: Fitzcarraldo
No way, too uniform in shape.
To: adam_az
Unobtanium hell, find Upsidaisium and cheap space travel becomes a reality!
To: adam_az
We used to joke that a rock was leverite. As in leave her right there.
17
posted on
02/07/2004 8:17:14 AM PST
by
doodad
To: null and void
Water, possibly, life, not necessarily.
http://www.grisda.org/origins/23110.htm "The most dramatic change in thinking about the origin of these spheres took place just a few years later when two investigators, Robert Dunham6 and Carroll Thomas,7 working independently, concluded that the pisoliths were not the result of the work of algae, but were formed inorganically, underground, by the gradual accumulation of their many lime layers (Figure 2) around an original nucleus. As water occasionally percolated down through the normally dry soil of the region it facilitated the replacement of the original lime sediments with layers of denser concentration which form the pisoliths. The common spherical concretions we find in many sedimentary rocks are thought to have formed in a similar way."
18
posted on
02/07/2004 8:18:12 AM PST
by
John H K
To: Fitzcarraldo
Look closely in the lower right corner...
Do you see it?
An arrowhead and a scraper!
19
posted on
02/07/2004 8:18:17 AM PST
by
CommandoFrank
(Peer into the depths of hell and there is the face of Islam!)
To: Fitzcarraldo
Sorry, once again can't help myself!
20
posted on
02/07/2004 8:18:42 AM PST
by
quantim
(Victory is not relative, it is absolute.)
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