It is my understanding there are other means to create silica.is usually created by either volcanic steam or a hot spring.
Unusual Silica Rich Soil Discovered on Mars (18 Dec 2007)
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Unusual Silica Rich Soil Discovered on Mars (18 Dec 2007)
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One more resource
Woah Spirit really made a mess there didn't she? But silica has a wide variety of uses in industry, from glass to computer chips. A few more incentives like that, and maybe private industry will beat government to Mars. Can't you just see the bulldozers? Now if we could just find oil...
Re: One more resource
Oil? I know that you were kidding, but isn't oil nothing more than decomposed ancient carbon-based plants? Any life that formed in the early history of Mars didn't last long enough to leave behind a sizeable carbon deposit.twixter wrote:Woah Spirit really made a mess there didn't she? But silica has a wide variety of uses in industry, from glass to computer chips. A few more incentives like that, and maybe private industry will beat government to Mars. Can't you just see the bulldozers? Now if we could just find oil...
What we need on Mars more than anything else is water and any raw material from which we can get oxygen so we can breathe and burn any oil that we find.
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ok, so I just did a quick google search on silica and would you believe that every article I read said nothing about
Life
organisms
water.
hmm, imagine that. Another leap of logic.
what I found however might be of interest to manufacturers of anything from glass to the smallest digital gadget. Mars, just another resevoir of materials. sounds like another place I know. but by the time we were able to fully harvest the raw materials on mars or the moon. the earth might have decided to recycle itself and start all over again from scratch. then the use for those raw materials available in other planets would have to wait again.
norm
Life
organisms
water.
hmm, imagine that. Another leap of logic.
what I found however might be of interest to manufacturers of anything from glass to the smallest digital gadget. Mars, just another resevoir of materials. sounds like another place I know. but by the time we were able to fully harvest the raw materials on mars or the moon. the earth might have decided to recycle itself and start all over again from scratch. then the use for those raw materials available in other planets would have to wait again.
norm
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Exactly.craterchains wrote:ahhh yes, "naturally", *coughs*, , , , ,
, , , and the "un-naturally" is created by?
The people of Bikini Atoll could most likely add to the discussion.
March 7, 1946 - March 7, 2006
60 Years of Exodus from Bikini Atoll
Thanks for the value added post Doum
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No, go back to school, that "theory" was proven wrong way back in 1957.Oil? I know that you were kidding, but isn't oil nothing more than decomposed ancient carbon-based plants?
No, there is plenty of water on Mars. APOD may be about pictures, but one should read too.What we need on Mars more than anything else is water
0000OO0O00OOO
"It's not what you know, or don't know, but what you know that isn't so that will hurt you." Will Rodgers 1938
Silica, silicon dioxide, forms with the exposure of silicon to oxygen and heat. Dissolved silicon in ground water is vented through hot springs and volcanic vents, combines with oxygen in the surrounding air or seawater forming silica. Silica is not soluble in water, so it precipitates out causing the surrounding area to become "silica rich". It's not surprising that volcanic vents and hot springs are the most common "natural" sources of "silica rich soils". Since oxygen and silicon are the two most common elements on Earth, it is also not surprising there is so much of this compound around.
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
Abiogenic petroleum origin theory is the minority opinion, especially in the West. Most oil exploration is based on biogenic theory.craterchains wrote:No, go back to school, that "theory" was proven wrong way back in 1957.starnut wrote:Oil? I know that you were kidding, but isn't oil nothing more than decomposed ancient carbon-based plants?
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
Thank you, bystander, for your support.bystander wrote: Abiogenic petroleum origin theory is the minority opinion, especially in the West. Most oil exploration is based on biogenic theory.
What makes you think that I only look at the pictures and not read the explanations and check the links? I don't recall anyone saying that Mars has plenty of water at present, only in the ancient time as evidenced by the numerous water channels and the silica left behind. Even the polar ice caps don't hold enough water to support a large human population and the agricultural and industrial production they might engage in. Any water still buried underground in either liquid or frozen form is still only speculated and unproven.craterchains wrote:No, there is plenty of water on Mars. APOD may be about pictures, but one should read too.What we need on Mars more than anything else is water
Fight ignorance!
Minority opinion indeed. I received a geology degree in the '90s and I don't recall much discussion at all of an abiogenic hypothesis for oil formation.
The evidence sure seems to be mounting for Mars having been a very water-rich planet at one time. The silica soil is just the latest. We need more rovers - the two we have there now have been outstanding!
The evidence sure seems to be mounting for Mars having been a very water-rich planet at one time. The silica soil is just the latest. We need more rovers - the two we have there now have been outstanding!
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Exactly what the Bikinian people would say also, bystander.Silica, silicon dioxide, forms with the exposure of silicon to oxygen and heat.
SiliconIt is also a component of silicones, a class-name for various synthetic plastic substances made of silicon, oxygen, carbon and hydrogen
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Re: is a giant
In space, no one can hear you explode.ta152h0 wrote:is a giant kabooomboom like a supernovae also produce silica ?
Sorry, I figured since everyone else is picking nits...
-Noel
kaboombooom
It is the visual cues that make these events so remarkable. perhaps it is fortunate we cannot hear these events. Can't wait till Eta Carinae produces gold.
Wolf Kotenberg