Instead of worshipping Yahweh, the devotees were perhaps dedicated to Mars and Jupiter.
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This oddball system of three stars might be our best chance at finding nearby life in the Universe.
Was there ever life on Mars? Is there life on Mars now? Did it originate there or here, on Earth? All possibilities are fascinating.
Experts believe they could cut the time it takes a rocket to reach Mars by up to 25%, shaving about two months off the trip.
The high pitches from the flute and the harp would reach your ears before the notes from the tuba and the cello.
Could life be widespread throughout the cosmos, in the subsurface oceans of ice-covered worlds? NASA’s Europa Clipper mission investigates.
Researchers have discovered 830-million-year-old microbes living inside a salt rock on Earth. Could the same occur on Mars?
No planet enters retrograde more frequently than Mercury, which does so 3-4 times each year. Here’s the scientific explanation for why.
The cycles of life all rely on the dynamism of the Earth’s crust.
You’ve got to know when to fight and when to laugh.
Like Mars today, Venus used to be a sci-fi superstar. Recent discoveries could re-ignite our interest in Earth’s “evil twin.”
In the night sky for March of 2022, only stars and the Moon, not planets, will greet you. The real show, however, arrives just before dawn.
From astrobiology to geology, a Moon base could serve as a laboratory unlike anything on Earth.
One book will gather all topics on the search for life in the Cosmos.
Mercury, Venus, and Mars are all uni-plate planets, and may always have been. Here’s what’s known about why Earth, uniquely, has plate tectonics.
“You develop an instant global consciousness, a people orientation, an intense dissatisfaction with the state of the world, and a compulsion to do something about it.”
Our research on a Martian meteorite provides new clues about early surface conditions on the red planet.
50 years ago, Herman Chernoff proposed using human faces to represent multidimensional datasets. It was a good idea in theory — but a disaster in practice.
The first human that isn’t an Earthling could be in our lifetime.
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Out of the four rocky planets in our Solar System, only Earth presently has plate tectonics. But billions of years ago, Venus had them, too.
Water on Mars is key for human survival on the Red Planet, not just for drinking but for growing food and making fuel and oxygen.
The surface and atmosphere is colored by ferric oxides. Beneath a very thin layer, mere millimeters deep in places, it’s not red anymore.
New DNA analyses raise questions over the theory that Christopher Columbus and his men brought syphilis to Europe.
Why can’t more rainwater be collected for the long, dry spring and summer when it’s needed?
Meanwhile meteorite hunters rushed to Berlin to find this most rare space rock.
Freethink’s weekly countdown of the biggest space news, featuring Starship’s second test flight, a new “dark mysteries” telescope, and more.
Slowing growth and limiting development isn’t living in harmony with nature—it is surrendering in a battle.
We are traveling in a realm that once exclusively belonged to the gods. Space travel will force humanity to rethink everything.
Its implications go well beyond the Earth itself, affecting even the future of space travel.
JWST just found its first transiting exoplanet, and it’s 99% the size of Earth. But with no atmosphere seen, perhaps air is truly rare.