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Nukes on Mars - 300M years ago


But Dr Brandenburg believes they are the remnants of nuclear explosions on the surface.

'When a thermonuclear bomb is detonated, it leaves a trace of Xenon 129 in that area, which is not the normal,' Jorjani told Jones, adding Dr Brandenburg's findings were 'alarming evidence' of life on Mars.

'And according to Dr Brandenburg, it's a very distinct signature. It's unmistakable, and it's specifically associated with thermonuclear weapons detonation.'

The 'not the normal' means higher-than-expected levels were found.

Dr Brandenburg also argued that Mars once had an Earth-like climate home to animal and plant life, and any intelligent life would have been about as advanced as the ancient Egyptians on Earth.
I'm not commenting since the article seems to do a much better job of presenting the argument.
 
I may read it later(probably not), but I find it hard to believe aliens developed near light speed travel(we'll presume ftl is impossible at this point) traveled decades/centuries to some other solar system, then said "You know what? Fuck you guys", and blew them up with primitive weapons.
 
I mean, this is his abstract:
Gonna go ahead and say no, there's zero evidence for nuclear explosions, faces, or pyramids on mars. Far more likely that pockets of obscure elements and radioactive material are more common on surfaces of planets with no substantial tectonic activity, and we'll find the same 'strange elements' on the surface of other planets, like mercury, as well as potentially in atmospheric dust of planets like Venus due to extreme levels of wind erosion (not sure if Venus actually has active tectonics).

Also, any species that could deploy nuclear weapons of 1,000MT to that planet after traveling there from another star system would find it far, far easier to just throw rocks from the belt at it.

Occam's razor, my dude.
 
I mean, this is his abstract:
Gonna go ahead and say no, there's zero evidence for nuclear explosions, faces, or pyramids on mars. Far more likely that pockets of obscure elements and radioactive material are more common on surfaces of planets with no substantial tectonic activity, and we'll find the same 'strange elements' on the surface of other planets, like mercury, as well as potentially in atmospheric dust of planets like Venus due to extreme levels of wind erosion (not sure if Venus actually has active tectonics).

Also, any species that could deploy nuclear weapons of 1,000MT to that planet after traveling there from another star system would find it far, far easier to just throw rocks from the belt at it.

Occam's razor, my dude.
"I hate people who throw rocks"
Currently re-watching The Expanse with my gf and oooo boy how that line hits differently when you know what happens later
 
Seems the same gas varies naturally on Earth as well.



So I'm guessing it's just a natural, um, gas release. :blush::mask: 😉
I'd like to take this opportunity to apologize to everyone affected by my "gas" release, and note that we'd all be a lot happier if it was just gas.
 
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