fossilesque to AstronomyEnglish · 1 year agoWe Might Have Accidentally Killed the Only Life We Ever Found on Mars Nearly 50 Years Ago - JSTOR Dailydaily.jstor.orgexternal-linkmessage-square12fedilinkarrow-up1157arrow-down120cross-posted to: space@lemmy.worldtechnews@radiation.partyhackernews@derp.foo
arrow-up1137arrow-down1external-linkWe Might Have Accidentally Killed the Only Life We Ever Found on Mars Nearly 50 Years Ago - JSTOR Dailydaily.jstor.orgfossilesque to AstronomyEnglish · 1 year agomessage-square12fedilinkcross-posted to: space@lemmy.worldtechnews@radiation.partyhackernews@derp.foo
minus-squareAimhere@midwest.sociallinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up38·1 year agoAt first, the title of the post made me think that we killed all (possible) life on Mars, not just in the samples taken, just by having landed there and contaminated the planet. Now that would have been a true tragedy.
minus-squareAllonzeeLV@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up22arrow-down3·edit-21 year agoI mean, to be fair, it would be quintessentially human if we did. It’s kind of our thing to fuck up thriving ecosystems for no good reason. We’ve even managed to turn our once vacant exosphere into a high velocity garbage dump, now that’s commitment to pollution.
At first, the title of the post made me think that we killed all (possible) life on Mars, not just in the samples taken, just by having landed there and contaminated the planet. Now that would have been a true tragedy.
I mean, to be fair, it would be quintessentially human if we did.
It’s kind of our thing to fuck up thriving ecosystems for no good reason.
We’ve even managed to turn our once vacant exosphere into a high velocity garbage dump, now that’s commitment to pollution.
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