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408

It's OK to say you haven't paid much attention. Kind of a mystery.

It's OK to say you haven't paid much attention. Kind of a mystery.

(post is archived)

[–] 5 pts

Mars was once a thriving planet teeming with life. I think the invasive space jews that infested it destroyed it and moved to Earth to continue their assault on all of God's creations. I suspect this same fate is what happened to Earth's twin sister Venus as well. The jews are a universal virus that knows only destruction and death.

[–] 3 pts

There's also theory that the asteroid belt is a destroyed planet that contained life. Which is why people lived underground for generations building cities. Some of the underground cities that are known about could comfortably house 40,000 people. Erich von Däniken gets into it with some of his later books referencing sources on the info.

[–] 1 pt

There's also theory that the asteroid belt is a destroyed planet that contained life.

There's not enough asteroid in the asteroid belt to make a real planet. It's a nice theory, though, and it was believed in for many years. But it's wrong.

[–] 1 pt

Astronauts in space revert to an exact martian sleep cycle for their days. It's some either coincidental or super spooky shit... like the moons size in relation to the sun.

[–] 1 pt

dude that's creepy, I did not know that

[–] 1 pt

There's also some kind of gene mutation that some people have that has them on 24.5 hr sleep cycle on earth as well. It's just that otherwise 24 hr sleep cycle astronauts on the iss go 24.5 hr as well. It's just some all around eyebrow raising shit. What does it mean? idk.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

I think there was water but not much life. Enough proto-life molecules had developed, however, during the solar system's early formation that meteors (of which there were considerably more back then) hit Mars and knocked debris containing these molecules into a collision course with Earth, seeding life here.

This is Eric Asphaug's conclusion as well.

[–] 1 pt

The Martian atmosphere has a bunch of (Argon? Xenon? I forgot the element) that would be indicative of a large or many nuclear explosions. Someone did the math to figure out how long ago (based on the known decay rate) that happened. Fucked if I remember those key details though.