The research has been published in PNAS on 12 August 2024. Here's the link to the paper: bit.ly/4ckwjC5 For further reading, here's the link to an article from UC Berkeley: bit.ly/3YJEfJR
it's an hypothesis based on cientific principles, so it's not a random supposition , but yeah, they still need to prove it true, which is hard considering it needs a lot of effort and equipment (which we don't have) just to prove it.
@@xLuis89xwe already have the scientific tools to prove it.. it’s getting the astronauts there and back to conduct all the research safely is what’s taking this thing so long. Something so small can jeopardize everyone and possibly everything.
@@xLuis89x scientific principles say that it is impossible for liquid water to exist on mars or even in mars. It would boil away into space and since it cannot rain on mars or even condensate dew . Once the water evaporates its gone forever. Thats the real science.
@@hanswissmeyer9950 because for some reason science is very small on our mainstream media coverage. You can Google it and you will get science articles on it published this week, but cnn isn’t gonna tell you. they didn’t even mention we may have found fossilized life as well, did they?
@@billionsandbillionsofstars Thanks just read your comments instead of watching the video. Figured it would make world headlines if it were actually true.
We'll get both of those before we ever see back to the future hover-boards. There's a whole generation of us skaters who have been waiting since 1985 ffs. Attention scientist dudes. Pull your fingers out !!
Just like all the water hidden under Sahara! And let's not forget, Sahara was also a green, beautiful place some 10.000 years ago - water stayed, but it's underground :)
Now that NASA has discovered water beneath the surface of Mars, approximately 10 kilometers deep, should we dare to tap into it? Where there is water, there could be life-perhaps even hostile life. Should we arm ourselves with enough medicine and weapons to fend off any deadly bacteria or nightmarish creatures that might crawl out from the depths?
Humans are social animals, but feel that individual pods would serve early settlers and science engineers better. Each would contribute to the overall needs of others, but go to a quiet place of their own. Eating and socialising in a “Diner” would connect you to your colleagues as well as your work! Your pod would have personal affects, a bed and shower. Clothing taken to a automated wash facility. I think I’ve talked myself into going to Mars! Lol
I've talked with Gemini about it, so, in short, here you go without speculations: "While the discovery of the underground reservoir of liquid water on Mars is a significant breakthrough, it's important to emphasize that the evidence is based on indirect measurements. The mathematical models, while highly sophisticated, are interpretations of seismic data. Direct confirmation would involve sending a probe to drill into the Martian subsurface and collect samples. This would provide definitive evidence of the presence of water and its properties. While such a mission is technologically challenging and expensive, it is a goal of many space agencies. So, while the evidence for water on Mars is strong and compelling, it's still considered a scientific hypothesis until it's confirmed through direct observation."
Cool, but we can barely dig deep enough through earth’s crust to accomplish anything. What are we going to do on a far away planet without any atmosphere or industrial development?
If we are to understand the planet and its history, this new information is groundbreaking. We don’t have to dig down to the water right away. That isn’t our priority.
No, there would be as many hazards . Air, food , undersea earthquakes, and many unknown factors. The ocean bottom is as alien to humans as the surface of Mars. Maybe more.
@@siddharthshekhar909 Let's say you're right and there are as many hazards. Well, you still don't have to travel for months through space on ultra expensive gas guzzling rockets. That automatically makes it easier. The reality is it'd be FAR easier to settle in Antarctica than it would on Mars, and no one wants to go there. For that matter much of Russia, Serbia, Canada, Greenland, etc. are all largely uninhabited. Why should we look at another planet that is harder in every way?
@@larion2336 Thank God you're not in charge of human exploration! We would all still be sitting around huddled in caves in the dark because"it's too far and scary"! Early human explorers took a leap of faith and sailed off into the unknown with no guarantees they would ever see home again! We humans are explorers and we will go out in the solar system and beyond and spread our colonies to the cosmos! There's nothing you can do to stop it! We can all thank Elon Musk and his billions for making it reality!🇺🇲👍
The dichotomy that is associated with the red planet ( somewhat habitable and simultaneously several life threatening conditions are prevalent)puts the earthlings at a stalemate position. Nevertheless, I am a believer. People belonging to the 19th century or early 20th century never did imagine a footprint on moon someday but it is a historical event now, likewise, someday on the Red planet as well. 🤞🌌✨💫❤️
That's where we came from in the first place, and we almost destroyed him all together. Like we are doing to Mother earth. Now it appears we want to go back to finish the job we started a million years ago. We are the planet killers.
@@captainmoretokin2172omg man shut it. We are not from there mars has been dead for billions of years not 1 million. I know it's difficult for you but try to use you're critical thinking skills and stop embarrassing the rest of us with you're ign0rance
Since water can evaporate into space, can it condense from space into our atmosphere? Is it possible that our solar system moves through clouds of water molecules where some of it falls into our atmosphere?
Just imagine the kind of organisms or bacteria that could exist in that water that will one day surely be dragged back here for humans to experience!...
The problems the Soviets ran into with the Kola Borehole (8 miles or so) was heating, which would be much less a problem with Mars. Though I'm no expert.
This discovery about water reservoirs on Mars is fascinating, but I think it also highlights a sobering reality: space remains an incredibly harsh and challenging place for humanity. With water trapped so deep below the surface and no practical means to access it (especially when Earth's deepest drill was only 12 km and never yielded anything practical), it seems we’re far from making any other planet a viable place to live. Research so far suggests Earth is still our only practical home. Space exploration is valuable, but perhaps it’s time to acknowledge that the dream of living on Mars or anywhere else may be far more distant than we’d like to admit and even that perhaps it might never realize.
Wait…if Mars still has volcanic activity then doesn’t its core still have to be active somehow??? Remember in school when we all learned that the movement of the core heats up the mantle??? Am I not remembering this right?
Ever considered the theory that every planet in our solar system might actually be Earth at different points in time? Just dropped a video exploring this wild idea - curious to hear your thoughts!
In Frank Herbert's fictitious extraterrestrial ecology, the sand trouts and their adult forms the giant worms cordoned off Arrakis' water, leaving the surface a desert. Too bad Herbert never lived to see actual examples of subterranean water on Mars, gas giants' moons, and possibly Pluto.
For many years now I wondered if Mars could have frozen over many lakes and,maybe,oceans.These ice covered bodies of water were then covered over with wind blown dust preserving the remaining water.This could pose a problem for any colonies built on Mars.I might be wise to build 'into' the mountains in case the crust could not sustain the weight of a growing colony.
Bro NASA budget is only 0.5% of the U.S economy and they still manage to maintain dozens of sattelites (That help us learn more about our planet + better understanding our impacts on global warming) and also still manages to make amazing missions to Mars and Jupiter, etc. Also lets not forget that we are improving a lot with global warming and by the time we send humans on Mars global warming might be almost gone.
@@arthurzettel6618 dude you sound really uninformed. Mars lost its thick atmosphere and most of its water billions of years ago not thousands, and that's billions with a B
Here's a thought. How deep are Martian lavatubes? Could a lavatube descend the 20 kilometers needed to reach the underground ocean? Then there would be little or no drilling to do.
I remember when Arnold was on Letterman, promoting Total Recall.. Arnold kept telling Dave 'It takes place on Mars,' and because of Arnold's heavy accent, Dave kept saying, 'It takes place on moss??' Haha
Theres no need for us to dream of staying on Mars. We have Earth and we should simply stop destroying it. Why chase a dream when you can have it here. a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
If you put all eggs in one basket, you might lose them all. One asteroid and our civ is gone. Given time, the probability of a hit will be 100%. Or what if our magnetic field will collapse? What if we got hit by a gamma ray burst from space? What if there is a cataclysmic supervolcano eruption like yellowstone? We still don't fully understand what lead to the big 5 mass extinction events in Earths history, for example during Perm-Trias period where 90% of all species just disappeared. It could happen again. We have to expand to other planets sooner or later if our species is to survive in the long run. This is just pure logic. It doesn't contradict with the notion to take better care of our home planet. We can do both, can't we?
Mostly ice caps and pockets if liquid eater deep below the surface, akak ground water warmer near the core compared to the cold and o2 depleted atomoshere
I wonder if Mars was inhabited by humans billions of years ago, and they moved to Earth when they realized their planet was dying, or if they sent the origins of life to Earth like seeds spread across the planet.
@FATillery According to scientists and professors, Mars has always been in the same orbit. It has never moved away from the sun or closer to the sun. That's why I believe a life form similar to ours lived on Mars, including plant and sea life. Who knows? Maybe Mars was struck by a meteor or comet and spread those seeds of life across the universe, waiting for the exact environment to allow them to flourish on different planets and in different solar systems.
We are still benefiting from the Apollo Missions to the moon. There are some benefits we know and many more that are unknown but will benefit all of humanity. Plus it’s a second world for humans and a possible fall back position in case of a catastrophic global event on Earth.
@@IRSMC Do we REALLY think we can make the multiple trips necessary, and establish a flourishing civilization, that doesn't involve hiding in caves from radiation?
When i was a kid, there were cartoons teaching that there are dried up riverbeds on Mars. Then years later everyone acted like that was not true. 🤷🏻♂️
I think you mean RADIOACTIVE! Which is quite toxic. Ever wondered just why the cancer rate here on earth has skyrocketed? Think about the 928 Nuclear bombs detonated on our American Soil from roughly 1951 to, say, 1993 or 1994. The Government knew all about radiation causing cancer back in the '50's yet they still set those bombs off in Nevada. Everything gets into the water table, including (and especially) radiation! Then it gets sucked up by the agriculture, which then gets fed to all the cattle, pigs, chickens, etc., not to mention the air. It has since spread all the way up past Maine and into Canada, not to mention all the other maniacal detonation set of in the Marshall Islands plus all the ones by the Soviet Union, China, India, Pakistan...the list goes on. You can thank all the idiots in the Pentagon and the Government, and then perhaps watch the movie, "Downwind." This country has gone down the tubes since "Operation Paperclip."
Not buying it. That much water in a single reservoir would not have gone unnoticed for so long. Enough to cover the entire surface of Mars 1 mile deep. That's a humongous body of water. The very first Mars quake they detected should've revealed a reservoir that size. Color me skeptical.
I think it’s really deep which accounts for why it has only recently been found. But it makes sense as there have been seasonal fluctuations in atmospheric conditions that would lead one to believe that something is breathing on Mars. It would make sense if there is microbial life below the surface
@@leontregerman491 It's possible microbial life is subterranean on Mars, I'm not disputing that. However, the amount of resources and scans by China, India, the U.A.E., NASA, Japan, etc. looking for water over nearly a decade and they've just recently found this enormous reservoir of water that can cover the entire surface of the planet a mile deep. Something doesn't add up. I haven't heard anything about this from any other source either. I think it's the Internet making sensational claims for clicks. So, I'm not buying it.
Going to Mars to live isn't wise when everything that makes Earth great is stopped or gone from Mars. The only reason to go is to learn from it's downfall & possibly how to stop it from happening to Earth & or maybe to correct some of Mar's problems, restarting the core, don't think that's gonna happen, raising the water & improving the atmosphere, possible but short lived because of no magnetic field from a spinning, hot core to produce it.
@@robertthomas1286 That is earth, takes more than water to create life. most of the base proteins, fats and sugars required for life cannot be done in water.
@@midnightwatchman1Those things would likely have developed when there was surface water and some atmosphere, so adaptation could have occured over millenia. But personally I think that nature is far more capable than we tend to think. We discover new life in places on Earth where we thought no life could exist. Yet we have physically explored so little of the oceans or even deep under the surface of dry land. Who knows what life is yet to be discovered?
@3:05 you show mars from space as a living planted with green continents, which represents fauna, and this is very misleading. Just because it once had surface water, it does not mean it had life.
Kind of sad that we don't get to experience real space exploration missions in our lifetime. How will our planet and humanity look like in 200-300 years?
7:40 Im not nearly educated on round trip timeframes to Mars but I thought a round trip was at minimum a few years. Mars and Earth are on different orbits and are only at their closest distances once every few years. I don't think you just go to a from Mars wheelie neely like whenever you want. There's only one window every few years.
Yes but in different forms than that of earth we can put magnetic field generators in one of the Lagrange points of mars to deflect some of the solar wind there are many possibilities
We can not even help or own planet's magnetic field yet alone make one for another planet. You would have to restart Mars core. Maybe in a thousand more years, we will have the tech to do so.
there's not going to be any other planet for humans to escape our over population, depletion of resources, pollution from byproducts of dirty industry that was kept in place long beyond it's viability or necessity by greed for the profits it generated while new alternatives were seized, classified, shelved and buried. Funds and research funnel into militaries in the name of defense and national security that saw in the span of 50 years the weapons of mass destruction go from dynamite and cannon balls to the atomic then hydrogen bombs, in the same 50 years we went from horse and buggy to low earth orbit only 10 years more we would land on the moon and then? We have never gone back, let alone ever gone further. Even more amazing going back to that same starting point 1900 that saw mankind go from the Model T to the moon in 60 years fast forward another 60 to 2020 120 years since the first automobiles ran on gasoline and put the horse and buggy out of business, that saw the birth of the internet to smart phones and chat gpt, what are we driving today? electric cars? not so much, despite the push for them and the need for them, they are nowhere near the advances made for cars that run on gas, not even close, not to mention the many problems with battery production and charging dilemmas and the irony is begging the question, how can we go from dynamite to atomic, and from tanks to moon landers, from dial up to Smart Homes and from gas powered cars to ... uh faster gas powered cars? All while we cant efficiently solve the problem of hunger, poverty and homelessness. There is a reason we haven't been back to the moon and it's the same reason we wont be allowed out into the cosmos, with our nukes or directed energy weapons we now possess. If we can't make it work on this planet with miracle biosphere we have been gifted, we won't be allowed to spread our brand life liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We were warned off the moon and are being closely observed by our concerned higher intelligent galactic neighbors, be sure we need to make it or break it right here on this blue bubble of life giving protection before its too late.
There are different teams working on different planet or moon projects at NASA. The one with the highest chance of finding live gets the most funding. Maybe you arent as cynical as you think.
What if there is actual intelligent beings "stuck" under dozens of KM of mars rock but when we dig deep enough to discover this, we accidentally expose them to excess levels of radiation and oxygen and then we kill them by accident :(
At around 900 they say that "Mars is 140 million miles from Earth". No. Its 140 million miles from the Sun. Since Earth is 93 million miles from the Sun the distance between the two planets as both orbit the sun varies between 47 million miles and 237 million miles. Though the avg is about 140 million.
The research has been published in PNAS on 12 August 2024. Here's the link to the paper: bit.ly/4ckwjC5
For further reading, here's the link to an article from UC Berkeley: bit.ly/3YJEfJR
I read your link. So, you could also say: "NASA has found oceans of 'unfrozen or thawed water' on Mars".
@TheSecretsoftheUniverse - fascinating!
Soon turbinium will be discovered leading to global revolution
Can't make beer without water 😊
@@elizabethbrown8833 A crucial detail too often forgotten!
That "discovery" is more supposition than reality.
At least this video is only 10 minutes.
Not even supposition.
It is just a lie to divert our attention from problems on our planet
it's an hypothesis based on cientific principles, so it's not a random supposition , but yeah, they still need to prove it true, which is hard considering it needs a lot of effort and equipment (which we don't have) just to prove it.
@@xLuis89xwe already have the scientific tools to prove it.. it’s getting the astronauts there and back to conduct all the research safely is what’s taking this thing so long. Something so small can jeopardize everyone and possibly everything.
@@xLuis89x scientific principles say that it is impossible for liquid water to exist on mars or even in mars. It would boil away into space and since it cannot rain on mars or even condensate dew . Once the water evaporates its gone forever. Thats the real science.
So what you're saying is Total Recall might be a documentary?
See you at the party 🎉
Hes an asshole
The other holy trinity, three cup bras.
Tina is real!?
Movies I grew up with were more than just entertainment. They were warnings. Born in 81.
Your title says they did find water... but then later in the video you say "the water might be, might exist"... so which is it?
They didn’t find water, yet.
@@billionsandbillionsofstarsyes they did
@@nickfanzo So why it is not mentioned where?
@@hanswissmeyer9950 because for some reason science is very small on our mainstream media coverage. You can Google it and you will get science articles on it published this week, but cnn isn’t gonna tell you. they didn’t even mention we may have found fossilized life as well, did they?
@@billionsandbillionsofstars Thanks just read your comments instead of watching the video. Figured it would make world headlines if it were actually true.
We got Mars oceans before GTA 6 💀
💀💀
💀💀
We'll get both of those before we ever see back to the future hover-boards. There's a whole generation of us skaters who have been waiting since 1985 ffs.
Attention scientist dudes. Pull your fingers out !!
Have you completed gta 5 ?
@@iAmDislikingEveryShort ; probably , twice. lol
Just like all the water hidden under Sahara! And let's not forget, Sahara was also a green, beautiful place some 10.000 years ago - water stayed, but it's underground :)
Let's send a whole bunch of 50 Megaton Nukes up there and just keep blowing the hole till it's deep enough, that's what my girlfriend says.
Imagine if the water was pushed out the surface
@@judas_saves I actually didn’t know that. That’s pretty cool!👍🏻
Now that NASA has discovered water beneath the surface of Mars, approximately 10 kilometers deep, should we dare to tap into it? Where there is water, there could be life-perhaps even hostile life. Should we arm ourselves with enough medicine and weapons to fend off any deadly bacteria or nightmarish creatures that might crawl out from the depths?
Then it still exists.
Finally, a video that at least mentions the human / sociological factor as a challenge.
Humans are social animals, but feel that individual pods would serve early settlers and science engineers better. Each would contribute to the overall needs of others, but go to a quiet place of their own. Eating and socialising in a “Diner” would connect you to your colleagues as well as your work! Your pod would have personal affects, a bed and shower. Clothing taken to a automated wash facility. I think I’ve talked myself into going to Mars! Lol
I've talked with Gemini about it, so, in short, here you go without speculations:
"While the discovery of the underground reservoir of liquid water on Mars is a significant breakthrough, it's important to emphasize that the evidence is based on indirect measurements. The mathematical models, while highly sophisticated, are interpretations of seismic data.
Direct confirmation would involve sending a probe to drill into the Martian subsurface and collect samples. This would provide definitive evidence of the presence of water and its properties. While such a mission is technologically challenging and expensive, it is a goal of many space agencies.
So, while the evidence for water on Mars is strong and compelling, it's still considered a scientific hypothesis until it's confirmed through direct observation."
I will wait until they drill. Not convinced. 😮
Europa:I have more water than that on Earth hiding behind my icy crust.
Mars:So do I.
Cute
How snowball earth thawed. Mars stole our ICE.
Mars doesn’t have an icy crust
We’re gonna find out more in the next couple years
There is nothing to find out. This discovery was made today when one of their rovers drove into water with life.
@@xTROLLINGxAnd how would you know???
@@deebrown4744 Theres a note in my diary to repeat your words every couple of years.
If there is no capital gains tax on Mars, I"M MOVING THERE!!!!!!
It'll be woke in no time, and not worthy of going
@@mlb6d9 I'd rather deal with "woke" over anything coming out of Project 2025.
Tax probably will be a daily work quota.
I’ll bring the swim suits
@@CommanderCody54 I'll bring the Sun shields :)
Cool, but we can barely dig deep enough through earth’s crust to accomplish anything. What are we going to do on a far away planet without any atmosphere or industrial development?
Worlds deepest dug pit is 12 KM so we're close. Everything can be transported with a few StarShips.
If we are to understand the planet and its history, this new information is groundbreaking. We don’t have to dig down to the water right away. That isn’t our priority.
Knowledge is admirable, but we can't manage to take care of or respect what we already have.
Information and time will show the way. It’s certainly a difficult goal but not impossible.
@@FrotLopOfficialOkay but the crust is about 60km, and digging that 12km hole took thirty years.
No air/grass/trees...no BEER! who the hell wants to go to Mars?
" I want to die on Mars " - Musk
@@TheSecretsoftheUniverse >> Go for it E Musk! I m staying here...
No time like the present.@@TheSecretsoftheUniverse
@@TheSecretsoftheUniverseIs the Earth's magnetic field weakening? If so, why ? What will be the consequences?
🤣
Terraforming Mars has always been a pipe dream...
I sea what you did there.
anything good in that pipe?
Correct, a pipe dream that generates a lot of interation in channels like this and money for the author, not to mention US propaganda.
Just pop a Dome on it! Dome it...
Nice to see somebody who realises that. The lol generation have difficulty in separating fantasy from reality.
would be FAR easier to have a colony on the bottom of the ocean.
I'll be the first one on top of the glass dome with a hammer 🤣🤣
No, there would be as many hazards . Air, food , undersea earthquakes, and many unknown factors. The ocean bottom is as alien to humans as the surface of Mars. Maybe more.
@@siddharthshekhar909 Let's say you're right and there are as many hazards. Well, you still don't have to travel for months through space on ultra expensive gas guzzling rockets. That automatically makes it easier. The reality is it'd be FAR easier to settle in Antarctica than it would on Mars, and no one wants to go there. For that matter much of Russia, Serbia, Canada, Greenland, etc. are all largely uninhabited. Why should we look at another planet that is harder in every way?
@@larion2336 Thank God you're not in charge of human exploration! We would all still be sitting around huddled in caves in the dark because"it's too far and scary"! Early human explorers took a leap of faith and sailed off into the unknown with no guarantees they would ever see home again! We humans are explorers and we will go out in the solar system and beyond and spread our colonies to the cosmos! There's nothing you can do to stop it! We can all thank Elon Musk and his billions for making it reality!🇺🇲👍
True, just ask the Ocean Gate explorers...
Snap, crackle, and pop.
You said, "help from Earth would be delayed by MINUTES." I think you meant MONTHS.
I think he means just the communication
It takes 20 minutes to talk one way communications I think the( help) was advice.
Actually, radio signals take 30 minutes to get to Earth from Mars and vice versa.
@@billionsandbillionsofstars I'm not talking about radio signals, I'm talking about sending a rescue ship.
@@crazyforcanada Oh, I see! Yeah, it’d definitely be too late by then because of the 6-9 month journey.
That is interesting, but how do we know that water once covered the whole planet of Mars?
Is the water toxic? Or safe for human use and consumption?
We don't know anything. there might as well be actual biological life living in there we wouldn't know anyway.
Wait until they find the people of Mars underground... 😮
If the rocks are igneous, how did they know how to hide the water?
The answer is 42 .
"Quaid, start the reactor ... " ^v^
The dichotomy that is associated with the red planet ( somewhat habitable and simultaneously several life threatening conditions are prevalent)puts the earthlings at a stalemate position. Nevertheless, I am a believer. People belonging to the 19th century or early 20th century never did imagine a footprint on moon someday but it is a historical event now, likewise, someday on the Red planet as well. 🤞🌌✨💫❤️
That's where we came from in the first place, and we almost destroyed him all together. Like we are doing to Mother earth. Now it appears we want to go back to finish the job we started a million years ago. We are the planet killers.
@@captainmoretokin2172omg man shut it. We are not from there mars has been dead for billions of years not 1 million. I know it's difficult for you but try to use you're critical thinking skills and stop embarrassing the rest of us with you're ign0rance
Even if Mars is terraformed you will be looking at year all around Greenland type environment. Very cold.
Since water can evaporate into space, can it condense from space into our atmosphere? Is it possible that our solar system moves through clouds of water molecules where some of it falls into our atmosphere?
Whater can form with the mixture of two gases..
Just imagine the kind of organisms or bacteria that could exist in that water that will one day surely be dragged back here for humans to experience!...
Promising oceans and delivering water between cracks in rocks is clickbaiting
Water cannot exist on mars for very long. It will evaporate or boil away due to low atmospheric pressure
So Mars is basically Arrakis.
What’s arrakis
@@YoButterStar Watch Dune movies
Minus the giant sand worms.
@@DRay62889 We don't know yet.
@@YoButterStar A planet in a book called "Dune" by Frank Herbert. They have made movies from the book also.
Buddha teached us: every material has four elements. Water Air Fire Earth.
Taught*
would Mars' smaller size relative to Earth maybe make it easier to drill into it in comparison?
The problems the Soviets ran into with the Kola Borehole (8 miles or so) was heating, which would be much less a problem with Mars. Though I'm no expert.
@@BigBrainBrianmars core is extremely cold relative to earth therefore heat would not be an issue as it is here
Yes, gravitationally speaking . Rick is lighter there and less heat in the core means we can therefore drill deeper easier
You'd have to ask an expert, like Bruce Willis.
This discovery about water reservoirs on Mars is fascinating, but I think it also highlights a sobering reality: space remains an incredibly harsh and challenging place for humanity. With water trapped so deep below the surface and no practical means to access it (especially when Earth's deepest drill was only 12 km and never yielded anything practical), it seems we’re far from making any other planet a viable place to live. Research so far suggests Earth is still our only practical home. Space exploration is valuable, but perhaps it’s time to acknowledge that the dream of living on Mars or anywhere else may be far more distant than we’d like to admit and even that perhaps it might never realize.
Send Quaid up there and have him activate the alien reactor inside the volcano. Easy fix!
If we really just discovered this, why is this not a bigger news like this is groundbreaking information..
Maybe because politics is more important to a lot of people than a discovery on a planet we've never been to
Wait…if Mars still has volcanic activity then doesn’t its core still have to be active somehow??? Remember in school when we all learned that the movement of the core heats up the mantle??? Am I not remembering this right?
Like I said...Don't believe ANYTHING which was probably overseen by the Government!
Ever considered the theory that every planet in our solar system might actually be Earth at different points in time? Just dropped a video exploring this wild idea - curious to hear your thoughts!
Hi there! Is this a peer reviewed research paper?
Yes, it's peer-reviewed.
www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.2409983121
Flight to Mars and back.
Death Wish.
Exactly so send the rich people first
@@marliegay4888 stay poor loser
It must be the Fremen! Herbert was right! Bless the Maker and his water!
In Frank Herbert's fictitious extraterrestrial ecology, the sand trouts and their adult forms the giant worms cordoned off Arrakis' water, leaving the surface a desert. Too bad Herbert never lived to see actual examples of subterranean water on Mars, gas giants' moons, and possibly Pluto.
For many years now I wondered if Mars could have frozen over many lakes and,maybe,oceans.These ice covered bodies of water were then covered over with wind blown dust preserving the remaining water.This could pose a problem for any colonies built on Mars.I might be wise to build 'into' the mountains in case the crust could not sustain the weight of a growing colony.
Follow up question:
How was there already room enough underground for exactly all that water?
Hollow mars
Same as earth. Dig a hole and you’ll find water under the surface.
In Mars early years of forming lava tubes cooled down and eventually filled in with water
It's called geology, look into it
Have you ever seen a sponge?
Sooo.... when we put water in a vacuum chamber it changes to steam(gas). so how can there be liquid water in the vacuum of space?
Leave the poor planet alone. We can’t even look after earth!
Not so earth is fine people need to follow God be repentant and keep the ten commandments commandments
Bro NASA budget is only 0.5% of the U.S economy and they still manage to maintain dozens of sattelites (That help us learn more about our planet + better understanding our impacts on global warming) and also still manages to make amazing missions to Mars and Jupiter, etc. Also lets not forget that we are improving a lot with global warming and by the time we send humans on Mars global warming might be almost gone.
Why can't we make another planet? 2 homes better than one
mars is already destroyed, we would actually make it better by colonising
Bible thumping @@stanleydavidson6543
That's the best news us Earthers have learned since we found out we wouldn't have to out run the dinosaurs ....
Sounds like humans were there before we escaped to earth. No wonder there's such a deep desire to return 😂
🤣🤣
It's only about 40,000 to 60,000 years since we left and colonized Earth.
@@arthurzettel6618you're an embarrassment to my species. Please stop talking conspiracy boy
Also the popularity of mars bars makes much more sense now.
@@arthurzettel6618 dude you sound really uninformed. Mars lost its thick atmosphere and most of its water billions of years ago not thousands, and that's billions with a B
Excellent update on Mars -- thank you!! 🚀
"Drill baby drill!"
MMGA
Fdt
@@Archanfel Make Mars Great Again 😂 i love it
MAGA 2024 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸.
@@Yourmomh0u5e yes we know your routine. And how much different it is now compared to 2011.
I say we take as many samples of current Mars as we can. And then make Mars what it’s supposed to be. A green planet with water.
Here's a thought. How deep are Martian lavatubes? Could a lavatube descend the 20 kilometers needed to reach the underground ocean? Then there would be little or no drilling to do.
Very surprised that much water underground that area of mars, great video, I learned a lot.
There is a difference to Liquid and Water
Highly unlikely it is any other liquid
Scenario: Man a year into successfully terraforming a site on Mars, then duststorms came and swept away everything.
Sure we found water but is there oil?
- Signed The Goverment
I remember when Arnold was on Letterman, promoting Total Recall.. Arnold kept telling Dave 'It takes place on Mars,' and because of Arnold's heavy accent, Dave kept saying, 'It takes place on moss??' Haha
Theres no need for us to dream of staying on Mars. We have Earth and we should simply stop destroying it. Why chase a dream when you can have it here. a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
If you put all eggs in one basket, you might lose them all.
One asteroid and our civ is gone.
Given time, the probability of a hit will be 100%.
Or what if our magnetic field will collapse?
What if we got hit by a gamma ray burst from space?
What if there is a cataclysmic supervolcano eruption like yellowstone? We still don't fully understand what lead to the big 5 mass extinction events in Earths history, for example during Perm-Trias period where 90% of all species just disappeared.
It could happen again.
We have to expand to other planets sooner or later if our species is to survive in the long run. This is just pure logic.
It doesn't contradict with the notion to take better care of our home planet.
We can do both, can't we?
2 homes better than 1
Great explanations, as always. Thanks.
There’s water everywhere
Not true
The moon: 😂
But not a drop to drink…
@@FrotLopOfficialthere’s water there as well.
not on gas giant planets
Mostly ice caps and pockets if liquid eater deep below the surface, akak ground water warmer near the core compared to the cold and o2 depleted atomoshere
I wonder if Mars was inhabited by humans billions of years ago, and they moved to Earth when they realized their planet was dying, or if they sent the origins of life to Earth like seeds spread across the planet.
I agree
@FATillery Mars couldn't have lost its atmosphere because of the sun, because Mars has been the same distance from the sun since its birth.
@FATillery According to scientists and professors, Mars has always been in the same orbit. It has never moved away from the sun or closer to the sun. That's why I believe a life form similar to ours lived on Mars, including plant and sea life. Who knows? Maybe Mars was struck by a meteor or comet and spread those seeds of life across the universe, waiting for the exact environment to allow them to flourish on different planets and in different solar systems.
And I go on what I do know, not mights.
@FATillery Okay, thanks.
You would not want to go to Mars even if Terraformed. The difference in gravity would weaken your bone structure and health over time.
Great - how does that help us here?
Planet B I'm guessing we have already fckd up this planet so maybe just having a plant B would help us.
@@IRSMC - We can't even get our men back down from the space station.
@@rubiks6That’s Boeing not everyone! 😂😂😂. They can come home in Dragon.
We are still benefiting from the Apollo Missions to the moon. There are some benefits we know and many more that are unknown but will benefit all of humanity. Plus it’s a second world for humans and a possible fall back position in case of a catastrophic global event on Earth.
@@IRSMC Do we REALLY think we can make the multiple trips necessary, and establish a flourishing civilization, that doesn't involve hiding in caves from radiation?
I love your channel ❤
When i was a kid, there were cartoons teaching that there are dried up riverbeds on Mars. Then years later everyone acted like that was not true. 🤷🏻♂️
Same reason Pluto was demoted. Edger Rice Borrows was american.
Forgot to mention the soil being extremely toxic
I think you mean RADIOACTIVE! Which is quite toxic. Ever wondered just why the cancer rate here on earth has skyrocketed? Think about the 928 Nuclear bombs detonated on our American Soil from roughly 1951 to, say, 1993 or 1994. The Government knew all about radiation causing cancer back in the '50's yet they still set those bombs off in Nevada. Everything gets into the water table, including (and especially) radiation! Then it gets sucked up by the agriculture, which then gets fed to all the cattle, pigs, chickens, etc., not to mention the air. It has since spread all the way up past Maine and into Canada, not to mention all the other maniacal detonation set of in the Marshall Islands plus all the ones by the Soviet Union, China, India, Pakistan...the list goes on. You can thank all the idiots in the Pentagon and the Government, and then perhaps watch the movie, "Downwind." This country has gone down the tubes since "Operation Paperclip."
Conquer the Moon 🌖 first and keep researching Mars 🧑🏿💻🧑🏿💻👨🏿⚕️🤷🏿♂️
so if there's h2o it can be made into o2 right?
Not buying it. That much water in a single reservoir would not have gone unnoticed for so long. Enough to cover the entire surface of Mars 1 mile deep. That's a humongous body of water. The very first Mars quake they detected should've revealed a reservoir that size. Color me skeptical.
I think it’s really deep which accounts for why it has only recently been found. But it makes sense as there have been seasonal fluctuations in atmospheric conditions that would lead one to believe that something is breathing on Mars. It would make sense if there is microbial life below the surface
@@leontregerman491 It's possible microbial life is subterranean on Mars, I'm not disputing that. However, the amount of resources and scans by China, India, the U.A.E., NASA, Japan, etc. looking for water over nearly a decade and they've just recently found this enormous reservoir of water that can cover the entire surface of the planet a mile deep. Something doesn't add up. I haven't heard anything about this from any other source either. I think it's the Internet making sensational claims for clicks. So, I'm not buying it.
Search a little deeper and you'll find quato down there.
Going to Mars to live isn't wise when everything that makes Earth great is stopped or gone from Mars. The only reason to go is to learn from it's downfall & possibly how to stop it from happening to Earth & or maybe to correct some of Mar's problems, restarting the core, don't think that's gonna happen, raising the water & improving the atmosphere, possible but short lived because of no magnetic field from a spinning, hot core to produce it.
That's not the lost ocean, even earth has water in its mantle! Bringing it to the surface won't change anything.
Unlikely to be any life on water so deep in volcanic rock
Funny how everywhere we’ve found water on Earth, there’s been life.
@@robertthomas1286 Right, even on boiling hot thermal vents in the deep ocean!!
@@robertthomas1286 That is earth, takes more than water to create life. most of the base proteins, fats and sugars required for life cannot be done in water.
@@midnightwatchman1and you know that from what ? Experience? 😮
@@midnightwatchman1Those things would likely have developed when there was surface water and some atmosphere, so adaptation could have occured over millenia. But personally I think that nature is far more capable than we tend to think. We discover new life in places on Earth where we thought no life could exist. Yet we have physically explored so little of the oceans or even deep under the surface of dry land. Who knows what life is yet to be discovered?
Human are trying to learn the space but still didn't even fully understand their own body yet.
Sorry. After so many hyped drama headlines, I would believe nothing this channel reports.
Thanks for saving me having to watch it. Cheers anthony
misinformation done 🫡
Thanks for exploring the scince 😊
Finally, my time 2 shine. Im Mars beach-bod ready, baby.
Just gotta with stand the super cold temps and radiation levels.
Wow! Underground swimming! Hyatt and Hilton are already plannng their first Mars resort!
Bottle it and sell it at top dollar!
ET doesnt like ground water, he/she/it likes filtered water with the righr quantity of alkalines and a splash of lemon flavor...
They could grow hops on domes then they could make beer!
Okay so really get to mars, then titan, then...pluto? Then leave the solar system? Seems like thats the loose plan for humanity.
Radioactive water? Mmmm.....
Conspiracy theorists bout to go nuts
@3:05 you show mars from space as a living planted with green continents, which represents fauna, and this is very misleading. Just because it once had surface water, it does not mean it had life.
fauna is green?
@@eeeaten Sorry, flora, you get the picture.
Omg people don’t understand how important this is
So would the water underground in Mars be more calm? A world with no tsunamis, violent sea waves, etc.?
Kind of sad that we don't get to experience real space exploration missions in our lifetime. How will our planet and humanity look like in 200-300 years?
We won't last that long. Rapture ready.
distance to great . We need to travel at speed of light Minium
7:40 Im not nearly educated on round trip timeframes to Mars but I thought a round trip was at minimum a few years. Mars and Earth are on different orbits and are only at their closest distances once every few years. I don't think you just go to a from Mars wheelie neely like whenever you want. There's only one window every few years.
Ya right. Is there a nice beach?
Big question I have is was the Martian magnetic field as powerful as the earths during its hay day?
no.
Without a magnetic field, how can Mars be terraformed? Can we make a magnetic field?
Yes but in different forms than that of earth we can put magnetic field generators in one of the Lagrange points of mars to deflect some of the solar wind there are many possibilities
We can create radiation belts with orbital h-bombs. Magnetic fields are harder, but we can figure it out.
Absolutely NEVER
@@Yourmomh0u5e- Alright enough of your unfounded delusional pipe dreams, move on 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
We can not even help or own planet's magnetic field yet alone make one for another planet. You would have to restart Mars core. Maybe in a thousand more years, we will have the tech to do so.
Fire has Water.
I give it a 90% chance that humans ultimately destroy mars and decide they just must move on to another planet...
@richards7073 🎯
There are plenty more to destroy and no time to waste
there's not going to be any other planet for humans to escape our over population, depletion of resources, pollution from byproducts of dirty industry that was kept in place long beyond it's viability or necessity by greed for the profits it generated while new alternatives were seized, classified, shelved and buried. Funds and research funnel into militaries in the name of defense and national security that saw in the span of 50 years the weapons of mass destruction go from dynamite and cannon balls to the atomic then hydrogen bombs, in the same 50 years we went from horse and buggy to low earth orbit only 10 years more we would land on the moon and then? We have never gone back, let alone ever gone further. Even more amazing going back to that same starting point 1900 that saw mankind go from the Model T to the moon in 60 years fast forward another 60 to 2020 120 years since the first automobiles ran on gasoline and put the horse and buggy out of business, that saw the birth of the internet to smart phones and chat gpt, what are we driving today? electric cars? not so much, despite the push for them and the need for them, they are nowhere near the advances made for cars that run on gas, not even close, not to mention the many problems with battery production and charging dilemmas and the irony is begging the question, how can we go from dynamite to atomic, and from tanks to moon landers, from dial up to Smart Homes and from gas powered cars to ... uh faster gas powered cars? All while we cant efficiently solve the problem of hunger, poverty and homelessness. There is a reason we haven't been back to the moon and it's the same reason we wont be allowed out into the cosmos, with our nukes or directed energy weapons we now possess. If we can't make it work on this planet with miracle biosphere we have been gifted, we won't be allowed to spread our brand life liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We were warned off the moon and are being closely observed by our concerned higher intelligent galactic neighbors, be sure we need to make it or break it right here on this blue bubble of life giving protection before its too late.
lets go!
Destroy what exactly? Mars is a lifeless wasteland.
There is a strong suggestion that ther might be water deep under the surface, it still needs much more research.
LOVE FROM PUNE INDIA🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳 😀☺❤🥰😍😊🙂😘❤🥰❤🥰❤❤
I thought they said they already did! I'm confused now...
They could be lying. Who's going to go to Mars to verify?
I'm very cynical.
we will send you 🤪
There are different teams working on different planet or moon projects at NASA. The one with the highest chance of finding live gets the most funding. Maybe you arent as cynical as you think.
@@hanswissmeyer9950
The "scientist" falsified their data to prove that climate change was "real", these scientists could be doing the same.
Water on Mars: As with Shell Oil, Exxon, just don't tell Bechtel.
What if there is actual intelligent beings "stuck" under dozens of KM of mars rock but when we dig deep enough to discover this, we accidentally expose them to excess levels of radiation and oxygen and then we kill them by accident :(
underground nightclubs
I think it would be funny
Maybe SpongeBob lives there
Small pocks?
So it means comets may not be the source of water on earth
Send TRUMP and ELON both!
Those rovers have been drilling like crazy!
But not a drop to drink! 😊
From the rhyme or the Martian mariner??😂😂
At around 900 they say that "Mars is 140 million miles from Earth". No. Its 140 million miles from the Sun. Since Earth is 93 million miles from the Sun the distance between the two planets as both orbit the sun varies between 47 million miles and 237 million miles. Though the avg is about 140 million.