Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Methane in meteorites shows Mars soil could support life

Methane in meteorites shows Mars soil could support life, study indicates

As an intuitive I can say that likely there was life once 65 million years ago on the planet that was blown apart in a nuclear war (proven by a Soviet Probe in the 1970s) which is now called the Asteroid belt. It's not surprising that Methane has been found in Mars meteorites because likely humanoids related to us here lived on Mars too until it's magnetosphere deteriorated possibly from technology or a lot of the atmosphere and water being blown off from collisions of asteroids from the planet that blew up hitting Mars.

It is also possible many more millions of years before the Sun heated up that Venus too might have once had life on it. And humanoids weren't safe here on earth until the asteroid hit the Gulf of Mexico and created the death of all the dinosaurs too big to hide either in caves, cracks or under the sea or lakes. All the big ones too big to hide from the nuclear winter of the Gulf of Mexico Asteroid 65 million years ago (likely from the blow up of the asteroid belt planet from a nuclear war) hit and killed them all within a couple of years of no sun or plants growing on the surface of the earth because the sun was obscured from the dust of the asteroid belt hitting earth.

So, anyway, it makes complete sense to me that Mars meteorites have methane in them. Life is much more common throughout the universe than people once thought but maybe in different ways than scientists thought in the 1940s through the 1960s or especially from the 1700s through the 1940s.

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