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Conspiracies & Cover-ups
The Dark Side Of The Moon
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<blockquote data-quote="Heinrich Hundekok" data-source="post: 6156" data-attributes="member: 354"><p><strong>Re: The Dark Side Of The Moon</strong></p><p></p><p>To a degree, certainly yes.</p><p></p><p>But I'd find it very doubtful if such an atmosphere would sustain any kind of life. Such an atmosphere would probably resemble that of Io, Jupiters innermost jovian moon - a poor rock - fairly the size of our moon - tormented by heavy radiation and collosal tidal forces origining from Jupiter.</p><p> </p><p>But again: since solar wind and temperature are much stronger/higher where we live than further out, any atmosphere around the moon - artificially made or caused by volcanic forces - would steam away into space, as soon as the "valve" was turned off.</p><p> </p><p>Starlord, are you really seriously suggesting that a civlization was blown off the moon several tens of millenniae ago? Whats the story? </p><p> </p><p>H.H.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Heinrich Hundekok, post: 6156, member: 354"] [b]Re: The Dark Side Of The Moon[/b] To a degree, certainly yes. But I'd find it very doubtful if such an atmosphere would sustain any kind of life. Such an atmosphere would probably resemble that of Io, Jupiters innermost jovian moon - a poor rock - fairly the size of our moon - tormented by heavy radiation and collosal tidal forces origining from Jupiter. But again: since solar wind and temperature are much stronger/higher where we live than further out, any atmosphere around the moon - artificially made or caused by volcanic forces - would steam away into space, as soon as the "valve" was turned off. Starlord, are you really seriously suggesting that a civlization was blown off the moon several tens of millenniae ago? Whats the story? H.H. [/QUOTE]
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