Hot Times on Mars

 

David Calder Hardy's Cosmology

Hot Time on Mars

 

 

 

 

Time Daily - May 28, 1998 - "Hot Times on Mars"
 
If life teemed upon the Red Planet once upon a millennium, it wouldn't have lacked for H20. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which pulls the strings on the Mars Global Surveyor satellite, now reports that Earth's neighbor shows the first clear evidence of oceans and widespread thermal activity in its early history -- both crucial elements in any sort of Martian genesis.

The signs of a hydrothermal system found by the Surveyor hint at a thicker, more Earth-like atmosphere during the planet's first couple billion years. High temperatures may also be one reason the planet is now red. The Greeks thought the Martian color meant war and destruction; Surveyor may end up proving it means creation. ÜÜ-- Mac McKean 

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My comment:-
 
When you read the full "Genesis Continuous" you will see that the above discovery fits exactly into my hypotheosis that Mars is about 2 billion years older than Earth. But if Mars where to be the same age as earth, as currently believed in the scientific world, how did Mars manage to evolve at twice the speed of our planet, particularly when it is so much further away from the sun?

David Calder Hardy