The newest Mars probe, named Perseverance, landed Thursday in Jezero Crater.
Jezero is located in the Isidis Basin or Isidis Planitia depending upon which map you refer to. The Isidis Basin is thought to have been a large lake or sea. Jezero Crater may have been part of that sea.
Examined alone Jezero Crater measures about thirty miles in diameter - the same size in volume as the Sea of Galilee. Large rivers spilled water into the area. The landing site of Perseverance is squarely in the middle of what was once a river delta.
Surface coordinates for the exact landing site are: 18.38 degrees north and 77.58 degrees east.
The larger area containing Isidis Planitia is called Syrtis Major, which can be found on most maps of Mars. The Jezero landing site is in the northeast corner of Syrtis Major. Syrtis Major is a large dark area visible from Earth via telescope. It’s on the opposite side of the planet from the large east west canyon known as Valles Marineris and quite close to Mars’ equator.
Perseverance’ landing site is also in close proximity to the landing site of UK's Beagle, which landed on Christmas Day in 2003. The European Space Agency’s Mars Express studied this area as well.
With Mars’ entire planetary surface to choose from, why are these international space agencies focusing their limited resources on the same spot within a few miles of each other?
The progression of Mars lander spacecraft is interesting.
In 1976 the 2 Viking landers didn’t move around. They stayed in the place where they landed and used a kind of scoop to retrieve surface dirt for examination. When it was discovered the surface soil of Mars was uniformly radioactive a new family of spacecraft were dispatched to the Red Planet with drilling mechanisms to examine underlying soil samples or to drill into rocks to obtain samples beneath the radioactive surface.
The radioactive isotope Xenon 129 is found extensively on the surface of Mars. It is this component of meteors found on earth that tell scientists the rock originated from the Red Planet.
Xenon 129 occurs nowhere in nature, but is created as a result of a nuclear explosion. There are only two places in the solar system where this isotope is found - on earth in limited quantities and on Mars everywhere.
The surface dirt and dust our spacecraft have to examine on Mars is contaminated with Xenon 129, which is why they have to drill through it to get a clean sample.
There are a LOT of really odd things going on with the Red Planet. This is just one of them.
What impact do these discoveries have upon the gospel? It's worth considering. Those that oppose the gospel consider it seriously.
So should we.
that's me, hollering from the choir loft...
Jezero is located in the Isidis Basin or Isidis Planitia depending upon which map you refer to. The Isidis Basin is thought to have been a large lake or sea. Jezero Crater may have been part of that sea.
Examined alone Jezero Crater measures about thirty miles in diameter - the same size in volume as the Sea of Galilee. Large rivers spilled water into the area. The landing site of Perseverance is squarely in the middle of what was once a river delta.
Surface coordinates for the exact landing site are: 18.38 degrees north and 77.58 degrees east.
The larger area containing Isidis Planitia is called Syrtis Major, which can be found on most maps of Mars. The Jezero landing site is in the northeast corner of Syrtis Major. Syrtis Major is a large dark area visible from Earth via telescope. It’s on the opposite side of the planet from the large east west canyon known as Valles Marineris and quite close to Mars’ equator.
Perseverance’ landing site is also in close proximity to the landing site of UK's Beagle, which landed on Christmas Day in 2003. The European Space Agency’s Mars Express studied this area as well.
With Mars’ entire planetary surface to choose from, why are these international space agencies focusing their limited resources on the same spot within a few miles of each other?
The progression of Mars lander spacecraft is interesting.
In 1976 the 2 Viking landers didn’t move around. They stayed in the place where they landed and used a kind of scoop to retrieve surface dirt for examination. When it was discovered the surface soil of Mars was uniformly radioactive a new family of spacecraft were dispatched to the Red Planet with drilling mechanisms to examine underlying soil samples or to drill into rocks to obtain samples beneath the radioactive surface.
The radioactive isotope Xenon 129 is found extensively on the surface of Mars. It is this component of meteors found on earth that tell scientists the rock originated from the Red Planet.
Xenon 129 occurs nowhere in nature, but is created as a result of a nuclear explosion. There are only two places in the solar system where this isotope is found - on earth in limited quantities and on Mars everywhere.
The surface dirt and dust our spacecraft have to examine on Mars is contaminated with Xenon 129, which is why they have to drill through it to get a clean sample.
There are a LOT of really odd things going on with the Red Planet. This is just one of them.
What impact do these discoveries have upon the gospel? It's worth considering. Those that oppose the gospel consider it seriously.
So should we.
that's me, hollering from the choir loft...