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Huygens Entry in the Atmosphere of Titan [saturn.jpl.nasa.gov]
I know, there's already someone who doesn't believe...
those are still fantastic images, believe it or not.
> Welcome to Titan! It's a long way from "..One small step for man..."
But how far is it from, say, a Chilean desert [wired.com]?
Why is it that photos of Venus [antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov], Mars [antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov], and now Titan [esa.int] all look the same? Same orangey-red, rocky "environments"... Uh huh.
Already, "scientists" are buttering us up and feeding us hooey for when we "visit" the "planet [antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov]" Pluto [antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov]...
And this talk about Russia keeping an eagle eye (Or should I say "bear?") on America, to keep them honest? Bah, they're in on it [nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov] too!
The photo is the same as the Titan link in my last message, and the caption starts off, "This color view from Titan gazes across a suddenly familiar but distant landscape..."
Yes, the Atacama Desert is rather distant for most of us...
> I like Q at the bottom of the list
Wow, I've never heard about that one - and I'm not sure I buy the possible explanation!
Titan's bizarre chemical environment may bear similarities to planet Earth's before life evolved.
I've actually wondered if Titan's atmosphere could be the result of evolution, before we found Earth.
[edited by: Brett_Tabke at 1:40 pm (utc) on Jan. 18, 2005]
[edit reason] there is a time when a thread is done - that time was several weeks ago ;) [/edit]