[QUOTE=DeanWinchester;39314631]Why are people finding this guy funny, it's quite possible since Mars lost its atmosphere, that the water evaporated and managed to leave the planet, there must be quite a lot still underground though.[/QUOTE]
Well, methane is released on earth when perma frost is melted. Also theres a small chance that macteria may be living in the permafrost as on earth, bacteria that are not dependant on the sun have been found deep underground in caves, releasing plumes of methane. this varies with the seasons which is why this find by nasa: [url]http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/mars/news/marsmethane.html[/url] is so intresting.
[quote]"On Earth, microorganisms thrive 2 to 3 kilometers (about 1.2 to 1.9 miles) beneath the Witwatersrand basin of South Africa, where natural radioactivity splits water molecules into molecular hydrogen (H2) and oxygen. The organisms use the hydrogen for energy. It might be possible for similar organisms to survive for billions of years below the permafrost layer on Mars, where water is liquid, radiation supplies energy, and carbon dioxide provides carbon,"[/quote]
in ancient times we and the dinosaurs were on mars, always at war,
then we made peace with dinosaurs and they left to earth
there was peace for a million years,
and then we threw asteroids on them and settled onto earth, in the mean time the dinosaur engineers stopped the core of mars, and everyone fled from mars to earth
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