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29 March 2004 Monday 07 Safar 1425



Planning human life on Mars

By Robin McKie


LONDON: Finding life on Mars has proved an elusive dream for decades. But now scientists believe they may be able to do it for themselves - by turning the Red Planet into a blue world with streams , green fields and fresh breezes and filling it with earthly creatures.

The idea - known as terraforming - sounds like science fiction. But turning Mars into an earthly paradise is being taken seriously by increasing numbers of researchers. They believe that, billions of years after its last seas and rivers dried up, Mars could be restored to its ancient glory thanks to human ingenuity.

Its craters would become lakes and its red, parched hillsides would be covered with forests, ultimately providing mankind's teeming ranks with a new home.

This startling concept will be the focus of a major international debate, to be hosted this week by America's space agency, Nasa, which is preparing a multi-billion-dollar Mars research programme at the request of President Bush. Leading researchers as well as science fiction writers, including Arthur C. Clarke and Greg Bear, will attend.

"Terraforming has long been a fictional topic," said Dr Michael Meyer, Nasa's senior scientist for astrobiology. "Now, with real scientists exploring the reality, we can ask what are the real possibilities, as well as the potential ramifications, of transforming Mars."

Most astronomers agree that Mars could be turned into a little Earth, though it would take decades to achieve this goal and would require massive expenditure. But many scientists are horrified by the concept.

"The idea of terraforming Mars is extreme, but it is not cranky - that is the truly horrible thing about it," said Paul Murdin, of the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, England.

"If it was just a silly science-fiction notion, you could laugh it off. But the idea is terribly real. That is why it is dreadful. We are mucking up this world at an incredible pace at the same time that we are talking about screwing up another planet."

Over the past months, astronomers have become increasingly confident they will find Martian life forms after decades of disappointment. -Dawn/The Observer News Service.




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