Cosmic Journeys - Mars: Earth that Never Was

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  • Опубліковано 26 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @717mienbao
    @717mienbao 10 років тому +32

    One of the most thorough documentaries on Mars that I've seen. Great stuff.

    • @deltadesign5697
      @deltadesign5697 4 роки тому +1

      I hope you're right. I noticed your comment whilst tuning in..

  • @jeffgarbaas9278
    @jeffgarbaas9278 5 років тому +4

    Good,accurate,to the point video on mars,without a million spliced interviews

  • @Adara007
    @Adara007 4 роки тому +3

    Gustav Holst's "The Planets" plays as the video begins and the narration starts - very apt!

  • @tspiderkeeper
    @tspiderkeeper 10 років тому +1

    this is the best documentaries ever with a great narrator an very educational space information even for me a space lover amateur astronomer

  • @fnersch
    @fnersch 11 років тому +6

    Hats off to Thomas Lucas. This is one of the best documentaries I've ever seen. Wish it was a full hour long!

  • @ryanthomas3554
    @ryanthomas3554 5 років тому +4

    I'm so glad we have all these super smart scientists to tell us exactly how all these things came to be.

    • @dpterminusreal
      @dpterminusreal Рік тому

      then, what's stopping you from, like, verifying this stuff? you can buy a telescope to check mars, basically any of them should be able to see it, if that's what you're worried about.
      for the theories, its the best info we have. we cant actually verify by going back in time or anything, we just landed a probe there, found water ice in the ground, and theorized about where it came from.

  • @yesterdaysguy
    @yesterdaysguy 12 років тому +1

    this series is AWESOME.. Thank you so much!

  • @Fabrikoooo
    @Fabrikoooo 5 років тому +43

    "We don't know how to live together on Earth, how the hell we are going to live together on Mars?" Jacque Fresco

    • @BirdmanandPrincess
      @BirdmanandPrincess 5 років тому +2

      .....good point !

    • @jerryslater3447
      @jerryslater3447 4 роки тому +2

      five to ten years in an igloo, you better all be good friends. Bindar Dundat in the High Arctic.

    • @cedricterry7864
      @cedricterry7864 3 роки тому

      a trick: you can watch movies at flixzone. Been using them for watching all kinds of movies lately.

    • @liancassius2361
      @liancassius2361 3 роки тому

      @Cedric Terry Yea, been using flixzone for since december myself =)

  • @scottcupp8129
    @scottcupp8129 4 роки тому +6

    Mars has, and always will, fascinate me. I especially love the movie "The Martian". Imagine being the only human on a strange, desolate, yet beautiful world. Maybe one day we will set foot on the planet but for now, a dream will have to do.

    • @YouTubeUpdatesKeepGettingWorse
      @YouTubeUpdatesKeepGettingWorse 4 роки тому

      We are going to step foot on Mars. It hasn’t been a “dream” for years so idk why you would say that

    • @iknowyoureright8564
      @iknowyoureright8564 3 роки тому

      I liked the Martian but don’t like Matt Damon.....after what he did in interstellar, the dirty stinkin’ traitor.....he deserves all he got

  • @adammm__alltogether
    @adammm__alltogether 11 років тому +229

    Reading comments on You tube makes me question the existence of intelligent life.

    • @choadatiostoad415
      @choadatiostoad415 7 років тому +6

      Colnando you're right Darwin did win in the long run because on his deathbed he disavowed natural selection so he actually did win when he went to heaven. I don't believe in creationism I believe the universe 13.6 billion years old, Evolution does exist but it's not through blind random natural selection.

    • @3ddazell
      @3ddazell 6 років тому +3

      Adam Synergy love this comment 🤣

    • @rickmaggie1
      @rickmaggie1 6 років тому +4

      Adam, just go with it and have some fun. Some of these crazy bastards make me laugh.

    • @timedrington139
      @timedrington139 6 років тому +1

      Darwin didn't do any such thing...the only thing he did on his death bed was die!

    • @dannydetonator
      @dannydetonator 6 років тому +1

      That's because societie's system throws away most of the sharpest minds' dna: we select the ignorant from this messed up gene pool👎

  • @megasegafan3947
    @megasegafan3947 11 років тому +4

    alot of the music made me want to watch star wars, but all in all very interesting. This is just what makes Science awesome, it really makes you think!

  • @trainknut
    @trainknut 10 років тому +3

    this video makes me think, not only that life is possible on other planets, but also might have happened on our neighbor around the same time life started on earth.
    and it also makes me think about how perfect in every way our planet is, and how the slightest of changes could possibly turn us into mars jr. in just a few minutes time.

  • @leoingson
    @leoingson 11 років тому

    Thanks for the very informative video description!

  • @peachtrees27
    @peachtrees27 11 років тому +3

    And this is my second most favorite video on UA-cam (after your Venus death piece). Love these two vids you did. Call me weird!

  • @Ral9284
    @Ral9284 11 років тому +38

    *Mars in a nutshell:* _"The Sahara dessert is a rain forest compared to Mars."_
    #Mars #Space #Science #NASA

  • @MrTheVraptor
    @MrTheVraptor 11 років тому +10

    Dick Rodstein (the narrator) has my second favorite voice of all time, the first being Morgan Freeman.

    • @darthjarjar5309
      @darthjarjar5309 4 роки тому

      Eewwww. Can’t take Freeman seriously as a narrator with those ugly earrings.

    • @Clickbait86
      @Clickbait86 3 роки тому

      Phuck Morgan freeman that traitor of our constitution

  • @mastrofnone8025
    @mastrofnone8025 5 років тому

    Best pictures of Mars Ive seen yet.

  • @adz.e
    @adz.e 11 років тому +8

    this blokes voice remind me of the land before time

  • @iOSDevRashad
    @iOSDevRashad 11 років тому

    Great documentary and Narrator.

  • @mymovies9172
    @mymovies9172 11 років тому +3

    Nice!!! Love the video

  • @jasperangel2057
    @jasperangel2057 3 роки тому +1

    Fan here in the Philippines 🌴😁💗

  • @MrDominex
    @MrDominex 5 років тому +3

    What if Mercury were guided into a collision with Mars, giving it a large iron core to create a magnetosphere and enough mass to hold on to a thick atmosphere?

  • @matthewsullivan2381
    @matthewsullivan2381 10 років тому +2

    Nice choice of music for the intro. ;)

  • @DiViNiTY1337
    @DiViNiTY1337 11 років тому +3

    I love some of the Star Wars inspired music, lol.
    Interesting and informative, just like always!

  • @AzumiRM
    @AzumiRM 12 років тому

    Amazing channel!

  • @ratonL
    @ratonL 11 років тому +4

    I believe it has to do with the relation between pressure and temperature -they're directly proportional- & the difference in the atmospheric pressure of Mars, compared to Earth.

  • @NarendraSajja
    @NarendraSajja 6 років тому

    Very good video. Thanks.

  • @janetrmn
    @janetrmn 10 років тому +5

    Gives me chills

    • @ovidiudrobota2182
      @ovidiudrobota2182 9 років тому

      Jay R Are you a beautiful girl?!

    • @ovidiudrobota2182
      @ovidiudrobota2182 9 років тому

      newbihack You opinion matters to you, ONLY. :)

    • @nakyer
      @nakyer 9 років тому +1

      Ovidiu Drobotă
      Nope. I think that opinion could be of great worth.

  • @NeetObotics
    @NeetObotics 11 років тому +1

    I am maaaaaaaaaaaad. This was amaizing man

  • @randytheo7406
    @randytheo7406 5 років тому +3

    these are scars caused by intense electrical discharge or lightning strikes. none of these canyons have inlets or outlets not caused by water erosion

  • @fsmdf
    @fsmdf 10 років тому

    I really enjoyed the music. Straight from the seventies. So good!

    • @mrpolyrhythm
      @mrpolyrhythm 10 років тому

      Are you referring to Holst's Mars the Bringer of War from the Planets? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Planets

    • @fsmdf
      @fsmdf 10 років тому

      Owen Thomas wow, so it's from much before the seventies. I'm an ignorant, I know! But it reminded me of those soundtracks you find in movies from the seventies. Perhaps it's just me.

  • @mrsquirrel5
    @mrsquirrel5 10 років тому +14

    I kinda wonder what would happen if somebody invented a super powered microwave strong enough to excite Mars's core, strengthening the gravitational field, and generating a more denser atmosphere...

    • @BLAZENYCBLACKOPS
      @BLAZENYCBLACKOPS 4 роки тому +1

      Happy Squirrel one of the most important things a planet needs is a moon like Earth has, honestly without our moon Earth may have never had any life whatsoever, our moon is so key to so much of what has taken place here on Earth.

  • @daveboy2000
    @daveboy2000 11 років тому

    Can't unsee, good find.

  • @michaelvail6559
    @michaelvail6559 5 років тому +6

    That background music is too distracting.

  • @davidjones8973
    @davidjones8973 12 років тому

    Great video, very interesting.

  • @Polszenager
    @Polszenager 11 років тому +4

    always in service for the good of mankind

  • @georgiosrentzios8507
    @georgiosrentzios8507 5 років тому +1

    NICE ANIMATED VIDEOS

  • @chateytung
    @chateytung 11 років тому +6

    if a comet can end life on Mars, It may also bring back life to Mars, Try to push a comet to Impact Mars, I understand there is many comet near by Mars, Use rocket to push the comet

    • @caylendenuccio1718
      @caylendenuccio1718 11 років тому +2

      lol

    • @MrTheVraptor
      @MrTheVraptor 11 років тому

      heh, like that would actually work

    • @Drafty01
      @Drafty01 10 років тому

      MrTheVraptor Well, you never know. Hey, there might be people with enough money to want to try this. Think of the kudos... lol
      Seriously though...

    • @ADerpyReality
      @ADerpyReality 5 років тому +1

      It is possible that the original bodies (Mars and Earth) hit each-other creating earths moon and greatly slowly earths day from about 6 hours to the just under 24 hours we have now.

    • @ajhproductions2347
      @ajhproductions2347 5 років тому

      I, uh.....I don’t.......what?

  • @Buna97
    @Buna97 12 років тому +1

    Cool, I went to go see that concert earlier this week, it was very good!

  • @hoomanfahim5877
    @hoomanfahim5877 11 років тому +6

    This is amazing''.,,

  • @winglessang31
    @winglessang31 5 років тому +1

    This’s a beautiful planet. I love Mars

  • @Pawnfirst007
    @Pawnfirst007 10 років тому +14

    Our moon will be an excellent place for us acquire the experiences needed to colonize a planet if we can survive there we can survive mars easily.

  • @Starbula
    @Starbula 11 років тому

    I love all of these.

  • @carriemaxwell4695
    @carriemaxwell4695 8 років тому +12

    and you're playing Gustav Holst "Mars" :)

  • @artyparis
    @artyparis 10 років тому

    Thanks for this video!

  • @GrandmasterBBC
    @GrandmasterBBC 10 років тому +3

    Amazing, this universe we live in.

  • @dexterwaweru8687
    @dexterwaweru8687 11 років тому

    I love these visuals

  • @smb123211
    @smb123211 9 років тому +10

    Actually, the reasons Venus and Mars are not like Earth are quite simple - they are the wrong distance from the sun and neither has a large moon. Earth proves that life can rise quickly even in harsh conditions but it also shows that complex life - much less sentient life - is probably extremely rare.
    We still are not sure about Mars. Empty lake beds prove nothing nor do polar ice caps, volcanoes and temperature. Considering the ease and speed of life on Earth, it's reasonable to assum that it at least started on Mars although the time frame was surely reduced.

    • @tanyagatlin3660
      @tanyagatlin3660 5 років тому +2

      Venus cant have a moon because even if it did venus would just keep pulling it apart so it would just keep fading away and away until finally it was nothing

  • @web262
    @web262 11 років тому +1

    love Dick Rodstein! great narrator!

  • @tonyferreira6679
    @tonyferreira6679 5 років тому +3

    Theres only rock, Stones, rusty and Xenon 129. Scars of destrucción a deth planet.

  • @yobeikcaj
    @yobeikcaj 11 років тому +1

    Welcome to UA-cam :)

  • @leighatkins22
    @leighatkins22 10 років тому +36

    Whoever compiled the data for this doco has completely ignored massively important data.
    Does ANYONE know the answers to the following questions:
    Question: What happens when a massive electromagnetic field collapses, say about the size of the ex-Martian magnetosphere?
    Answer: It returns ALL that stored electromagnetic energy back to its generating body in the form of electrical energy in what is called a 'back-spike'. This is known electrical fact.
    Question: What would the results of such a back-spike would look like?
    Answer: After the initial MASSIVE ELECTRICAL LASHING on a scale of nobody's business (so bright, you'd see if from Earth), it would leave LARGE DEEP DENDRITIC CHANNELS etched in the surface RESEMBLING canyons & channels as worn by water, with scalloped edges. There'd be 'blueberries' everywhere, especially in the presence of large available deposits of iron (Mars IS red). Half the surface body mass would be vaporized away & so would be at a lower altitude (you know, the hemisphere with hardly ANY craters left, probably coz they're all vaporized away with the surface) while the other hemisphere would have the dendritic welding etch marks. We'd even see the strange 'wave marks' on the bottoms of craters. Over time, we'd see the atmosphere all but gone with only heavier gases hanging long enough to make an appearance as they leave the surface on their way into space. EXACTLY AS WE ARE OBSERVING ON MARS RIGHT NOW.
    Yes, Mars did have water on it at one stage, but not near as much as the scientific community is assuming. We have NO REASON to assume that Mars had as much water as Earth originally coz 80% of Earth's water doesn't match the rest of the planet's atomic signature anyway - it came later & from somewhere else.
    EVERYTHING that we're seeing on Mars which is confusing us right now is the DIRECT RESULT of a MASSIVE BACK-SPIKE FROM WHEN THE PLANET'S ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELD COLLAPSED.
    And before anyone does a knee-jerk refusal of this, go watch 'The Lightning Scarred Planet Mars' by Thunderbolts Project on UA-cam. Their origin theory is different to mine but their evidence is compelling - these guys have truly done their research but I fear the community doesn't listen because of FUNDING FIGHTS...

    • @trevorthompson6155
      @trevorthompson6155 9 років тому +1

      Interesting.

    • @mimikrue
      @mimikrue 7 років тому +1

      +Trevor Thompson Interesting Indeed.

    • @michaelgreene7385
      @michaelgreene7385 6 років тому +2

      Is that Morgon Freeman?

    • @DANTHETUBEMAN
      @DANTHETUBEMAN 6 років тому +3

      if another planet was close by, that could ground out the energy off mars. the trench looks like electric discharge of another planet moving past as it arked out the trench.

    • @dannydetonator
      @dannydetonator 6 років тому +3

      leighatkins: i new you are electricalhead universal after reading 5lines of comment. Sorry, i see exaggeration and mixed up physics in their theory. No different from Fon Denicken and all who need to sell their cococtions.. Proof?

  • @TheInufalo
    @TheInufalo 11 років тому

    I know I find the Idea fascinating. I currently studying astrobiology and what we have discovered with curiosity is amazing.

  • @StaticExhaust
    @StaticExhaust 11 років тому +9

    should plant some trees on mars :)

    • @Aintnowaydude
      @Aintnowaydude 4 роки тому +2

      Mr beast 7 years ago right here

    • @Knaeben
      @Knaeben 3 роки тому

      They would freeze

  • @dichebach
    @dichebach 12 років тому

    Although I share the fascination with exploring and understanding all that is out there, I have to agree with you rushy548. There are millions of humans deprived of the most basic essentials to thrive and yet, those of us who are advantaged find greater solace in watching videos about a dead desert world. There is an irony to the modern age that I do not think can compare to any previous era of human extravagance, arrogance and waste.

  • @WinVisten
    @WinVisten 10 років тому +38

    I'm a Christian and I absolutely LOVE this channel. :D

    • @WinVisten
      @WinVisten 10 років тому

      a1ananth 20-year old, actually.
      What 12 year old do you know that attends a college?

    • @WinVisten
      @WinVisten 10 років тому

      ***** I don't even know who he is. D:

    • @WinVisten
      @WinVisten 10 років тому

      ***** Fictional people don't count.
      Only real ones.

    • @WinVisten
      @WinVisten 10 років тому

      ***** I'm 20.
      I've built computers before, too.
      I don't think a 12 year old could do that.
      And wow, that site is funny. ::p

    • @WinVisten
      @WinVisten 10 років тому

      ***** If anyone was trying to troll me, it was the guy who first said I was 12.
      I don't think that site is for real anyways, I don't know how it could be.
      I mean, college just wouldn't be a friendly environment for a 12 year old even if they WERE smart enough to get in.

  • @yusufyaman4121
    @yusufyaman4121 11 років тому

    Müthiş bilgiler. Paylaşımlarınız için çok teşekkürler.
    Yusuf YAMAN

  • @bee5120
    @bee5120 8 років тому +7

    If we could somehow cultivate a plant strong enough to withstand the atmosphere in Mars, we could deliver a lot of these plants to Mars over time and turn that carbon dioxide into useful oxygen for humans.

    • @williamm1981
      @williamm1981 5 років тому

      @Teddles Peddles "You're"

    • @Manwendlil
      @Manwendlil 5 років тому

      if we ever can found settlements on mars or even the moon. this is ,as of yet, only possible in animations or speculations.

  • @ossian1977
    @ossian1977 12 років тому

    Glad there are people who share my views! What can I say, we all find answers in different places and different ways, starting from different assumptions (mine is the power of mankind to steer its own future towards a good shared by the many, despite the tendency for the opposite shown in history). Mars is special because of its apparent "futility". The ability to ask for more than just tools (a hammer, an aspirine...), to wonder and be amazed is the true miracle to me, i.e. human conscience.

  • @AImighty
    @AImighty 10 років тому +7

    KH2 reference in the title???

    • @henrychoo4361
      @henrychoo4361 10 років тому

      lol yea XD the final mission world lol

  • @bnbranson
    @bnbranson 12 років тому +1

    If you think about the story of Mar's desolation is sad.. but this is amazing

  • @loveflowers39
    @loveflowers39 9 років тому +28

    Humans altimate achievement would be to make Mars another Earth.

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday 8 років тому +1

      +Frank K If Mars was really like Earth back then, Mars would be Earth's brother. Mars has become a canvas for which we could return it (Paint it) to they way Mars was in it's glory days.

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday 8 років тому +1

      ***** Correct....... 2.7 billion years ago. Venus somehow ended up looking worse then Mars and it survived 1.3 billion years longer. lol

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday 8 років тому +1

      ***** No Mars lost water due to a weak magnetic field. Venus lost water due to a supposed asteroid that slammed Venus causing the planet to flip on it's axis and a loss of most of the water into space. And any remaining water on the surface would turn into carbon dioxide and get absorbed by the atmosphere and the hydrogen would get lost into space.

    • @winstonrussa
      @winstonrussa 7 років тому

      some scientist said teraforming mars is not possible.

    • @nickhowatson4745
      @nickhowatson4745 7 років тому +1

      I don't think that we should do that to mars. just let it be. we need to focus on saving our own planet. going to another planet is a cheap and lazy move. its like lets just ignore the problems here and move on instead of fixing them.

  • @0ldManGaming
    @0ldManGaming 11 років тому

    I love it. Just fabulous.

  • @driedpancake
    @driedpancake 9 років тому +18

    Poor Mars I cri everytim

    • @andrewxoxo3421
      @andrewxoxo3421 9 років тому +1

      SAME BRO!!

    • @Starshock119
      @Starshock119 9 років тому +2

      swegg But what if Mars was not kill?

    • @eclipticgoddess5233
      @eclipticgoddess5233 9 років тому +1

      +Starshock kill lol maybe, mars has trees , animal because the mars core explode the magma flow over all the planet and cause rocks and because of old the rocks become sand and the coldness above the mars sometimes the ice,snow melt the water goes down in the mars and some of the water flow and dry and become salt :O

    • @redpipola
      @redpipola 9 років тому

      +Starshock did you see that? *camera zooms to water on Mars as illuminatis appeared*

    • @LordRICHARD100
      @LordRICHARD100 8 років тому +3

      +pipola5594 Salcedo at 7:32, listen closly to the music as he's explaining about traces found at ocean shorelines... LOOK at that BLUE ass land! If Mars is the red planet, why is there blue grounds? Mars really isnt what we think it is.

  • @ciak1
    @ciak1 12 років тому

    It's absolutely fantastic.

  • @Brentsfriend
    @Brentsfriend 8 років тому +4

    I believe in Martians!

  • @jamesmiller3548
    @jamesmiller3548 4 роки тому +1

    Humanity, earth: so much to learn, so little time. Incredible, beautiful...tragic.

  • @Iszth1
    @Iszth1 10 років тому +4

    Mars to Earth: "I'm gonna be just like you big brother! We're gonna live together forever and make so many cool creatures! :D"
    ... I made myself sad :I

  • @timothymcgervey5401
    @timothymcgervey5401 10 років тому +1

    I love everything about our universe.

  • @charlieguiang8021
    @charlieguiang8021 9 років тому +16

    atlantis was never an island. it was mars long long ago.

    • @nakyer
      @nakyer 9 років тому +1

      Charlie Guiang
      No it wasn't. You're thinking of Cleveland.

    • @EnderBuster360
      @EnderBuster360 9 років тому

      +Diamond Golem seems leit? that seems legit

    • @BandytaCzasu
      @BandytaCzasu 9 років тому

      +Charlie Guiang Sure. And I was Julius Caesar in my previous life.

    • @CodeZulu
      @CodeZulu 6 років тому

      Interesting ...

    • @egooidios5061
      @egooidios5061 6 років тому

      Atlantis is just a symbolism today, of a place far more technologically advanced than us. It does not even matter anymore if there ever was a place like that, let us just say that it will remain ever elusive. Atlantis was in Iron age when all the rest were in copper age. Atlantis would be in the Industrial age when everyone else was in Renaissance. Atlantis would be a multiplanet empire with a Martian capital when we made our world wars. And Atlantis will be somewhere in Alpha Centauri when we get to colonise Mars. The list goes on...

  • @strategicthinker8899
    @strategicthinker8899 6 років тому

    Mars is a tear-down of a planet BUT it's fascinating and can be made good by us. We should go.

  • @chateytung
    @chateytung 11 років тому +3

    if we can buried a nuclear reactor deep into Mars core, we may generate the magnetic field

  • @brianmcnellis5512
    @brianmcnellis5512 4 роки тому +2

    There's Beach Front property available for us all throughout the cosmos on the astral realms.
    Pick a time and place and put a castle 6 miles high if you like.
    If astral projection doesn't come easy that's okay.
    Your porpoise in life is at least in part, to try and perfect your Dreamstate.

  • @ester5534
    @ester5534 11 років тому +3

    thumbs up if you like penguins

  • @kohjing4159
    @kohjing4159 12 років тому +1

    This is so interesting

  • @bengor7664
    @bengor7664 10 років тому +4

    The narrator's name is "dick" :)

    • @Hadgerz
      @Hadgerz 9 років тому

      Dick _Rod_stein.
      A name like that can't go unpunished forever.

  • @alexandrubobaru
    @alexandrubobaru 12 років тому

    Nice one :)

  • @carolinawidman
    @carolinawidman 10 років тому +1

    Very interesting

  • @clintongrandy7640
    @clintongrandy7640 5 років тому

    We have hope for survival searching the universe, mankind will survive forever! Thank God!

  • @davidpetersen1
    @davidpetersen1 6 років тому

    Excellent program!! Thanks :)

  • @Venthasse2
    @Venthasse2 11 років тому +1

    Cool and good

  • @kingzaynsmyname3634
    @kingzaynsmyname3634 2 роки тому

    Nice documentary! Though is that the music from Indepence Day at the start?

  • @OHANAgamersTheBestVideosEver
    @OHANAgamersTheBestVideosEver 11 років тому

    amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @Scapestoat
    @Scapestoat 11 років тому

    I'll stick them on my list! I still don't have a bigger bookcase, but one can never have enough Niven, and those -are- kinda classics anyway. :)

  • @urint3902
    @urint3902 11 років тому

    Whatever you were trying to say here can be officially declared as one of the world's top mysteries.

  • @henrypuyi5485
    @henrypuyi5485 11 років тому

    Would the atmospheric pressure at the bottom of Mariner Valley be appreciably higher than at the surface?

  • @sandradowling
    @sandradowling 12 років тому

    exactly, it's nice to see a fellow believer

  • @noahboychannel5370
    @noahboychannel5370 2 роки тому

    What music was used in this video I'm looking for that music what music was used during his video

  • @iYearn4Cats
    @iYearn4Cats 11 років тому

    On the other hand, I agree that finding water is not the same as discovering life. If one were searching for life, and it were necessary that they locate it rather quickly, but instead only found microscopic organisms, they would be out of luck.

  • @phantokamistika2008
    @phantokamistika2008 12 років тому

    Mars - Gustav Holst In the background at the beginning. FAVORITE piece of music ever. Just had a mini spaz attack.

  • @fernandatralala
    @fernandatralala 12 років тому

    Amazing!

    • @nduendoja9549
      @nduendoja9549 5 років тому

      Fernanda Tralala kagen halilgashit

  • @leighbarton7064
    @leighbarton7064 6 років тому

    Reccomendation: Instead of a manned "expedition", try a satelite with a research team to actually familiarize with the Martian environment.A crew of 150 or so should be included.

  • @relentlessmadman
    @relentlessmadman 11 років тому

    been there have ya? How'd you get back

  • @Pleiodes
    @Pleiodes 11 років тому

    your right! we are extremly lucky that life can exist on earth.

  • @ryanjohnson3998
    @ryanjohnson3998 11 років тому

    This is quality

  • @jdsnz1886
    @jdsnz1886 11 років тому

    ....could we be the next mars? if we continue to overlook important issues to save our planet??? I think YES!

  • @TheGaaraFunk
    @TheGaaraFunk 11 років тому

    I like how this video is not one sided. Perhaps the ancient civilizations here on Earth stole the elements and effected the stability of Mars.

  • @sheipi5735
    @sheipi5735 3 роки тому

    Best 25 minutes of my life :)

  • @clipsvh
    @clipsvh 11 років тому

    Have you even ever been to Mars? If not, how can you say it sucks? I was there last week. It was awesome, they had a roller coaster and everything!

  • @kemaNmore
    @kemaNmore 11 років тому

    Man I love this Documentation. And I love the Guys Voice :D But there's something way more interresting then Mars. Jupiter.. Check some other Docus'. Youll find out that nothing of human beeings or even other things like meteoroits have ever seen or touched the ground of this huge planet. Coverd by many diffrent Gas-Clouds. It was once possible for a human fotosatellite to fly into a view cloud-levels. It looked like our sky, just giant, colourful, windy and bad weather. Whats on the Ground..?