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As the earth and mars begin to settle in each other's orbit, pluto would fuse with our sun,
and the heat expansion from it would act as a catalyst to generate such heat through the solar system, divisible gas dilution on planet earth may greatly be accelerated and allow any living creature, with a finer respiratory system to breath our atmosphere.
We might say, by accelerating the evolutionary cycle
of our own world, the Martian population could become the true inheritors of Earth.
And although on closer inspection this seems an audacious act to undertake, we have to remember the kind of stakes they would have been playing for. At this period in Martian history, they would not have been discussing an acquisition of another world, they would have been discussing the very survival of their species.
We cannot fully comprehend the serious nature of this problem, as its enormity is vastly too gigantic to contemplate. But what we can do is take sympathetic look at it from our own prospective.
We said gas dilution of any atmosphere would create a slow purification of air quality. Already hear on Earth, a smoggy day can bring campaigners flooding on to our streets, protesting about impending doom. Imagine
what would happen if someone suggested you were not going to have an atmosphere at all! The consternation that would filter through would be unimaginable; people would instantly demand action to counter this natural course of events, and prohibit its progress. But what could be done? For us I would imagine very little. We look on a planetary evolutionary scale and see our nearest productive neighbour as Jupiter. But Martians must have viewed our Earth with extremely envious eyes; and who knows, maybe they still do.
But at that point, they would have only them two options we spoke of.
We said the first would be to push Pluto from its outer orbit, and sling it catapult like through our solar system, hooking both the Earth and Mars in to each others' orbits. We might say this happened instinctively as a test shot, because if we view Pluto, we see a small, insignificant planet, which we suggested was probably a satellite of Neptune.
After careful consideration, I would suggests Martian scientists took calculations, made a prediction and set a very large thermonuclear charge off just behind Pluto as it orbited its planet. The
shock waves from this charge would have literally pushed Pluto from its orbit, and sent it forth on its cosmological mission.
As the precision of this event would be so vastly delicate, I would think it must have been designed to
miss both the Earth and Mars by a considerable distance. This we see has happened, Pluto now sits comfortably in its own orbit and continues its relentless pursuit of a home. But although we might logically argue about the fragility of Pluto, and it wondrous journey, what we cannot ignore, is the significant philosophy it must have played during the planning era, of what would become the greatest event in our own solar system: The moving of Venus from its planetary orbit, out into space, and launched on a downward journey to interchange the orbits of our Earth and Mars.
This event on cosmological terms must have been truly spectacular. When a large detonation of thermonuclear fusion took place, Martian life must have literally held its
breath.
Continued
Essay Paper: Mars 2.
Essay Paper: Mars 2.
Essay Paper: Mars 3.
Essay Paper: Mars 4.
Essay Paper: Mars 5.
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Essay Paper: Mars 11.
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Essay Paper: Mars 13.
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