Watching this newborn island erode could tell us a lot about Mars0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology, Space
- December 12, 2017
Watching this newborn island erode could tell us a lot about Mars
Watching this newborn island erode could tell us a lot about Mars
Innovative educator Scott Deschaine has a passion for finding life in the upper atmosphere. See his new film, Not Alone – The Life Above.
The mysterious discovery was made by harnessing Google’s machine learning prowess
In October 2017 a curious post appeared on the facebook page of ‘Art Bell’s Midnight In The Desert Feat Heather Wade’. It showed an apparent daylight scent of a ‘UFO’ in the desert with a helicopter hovering overhead.
NASA’s latest New Frontiers mission, OSIRIS-REx, will venture to a near-Earth asteroid to discover clues about the unique resources asteroids hold, processes that affect asteroids’ orbital paths and their potential for impacting Earth, and the origins of life in the solar system.
NASA has unveiled its plan for its next Mars rover, “Mars 2020”, which will collect samples from the surface of the red planet.
Two very exciting aspects of diamond were listed above… one that the Romans believed that Diamonds were parts of the outer rings of stars that fell to earth (indeed diamonds need high pressure for their creation) and the other is the belief that diamonds activate the seventh chakra.
A new French study suggests that all iron tools from the Bronze Age, including King Tutankhamun’s dagger, have extraterrestrial roots.
Excitonium has a team of researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign… well… excited!