>> <
>> On Jul 6, 10:32 pm, Lin Liangtai
>> yahoo.com.tw> wrote to
>> several news groups:
>> <
>> His headline:
>> <
>> NASA is trying to shake loose Martian fossil bone tissue
>> <
>> Fig. 1 shows nine arrows pointing to vertical blood vessel remains in
>> nine fossil osteons ( bone tissue) in a trench named Snow White.
>> <
>> NASA says the white color area is where water ice is, although it is
>> non-continuous and very small in size.
>> <
>> NASA plans to scoop up the water ice there on
>> July 8 to put it into an oven for testing. As the soil
>> (containing water ice) is unusually clumpy, NASA plans to shake the
>> soil  until it passes the 1mm holes of a screen above the oven, just
>> as NASA did last time.
>> <
>> Such shaking could damage related instruments. Have you heard of
>> shaking loose bone tissues, fossilized
>> or not?
>> <
>> Couldn't NASA find someone who knows about bone basics?
>> <
>> Fig. 1:http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?i=lin440315&b=20&f=1555082227&p=0
>> <
>> Source of Fig. 1:http://www.flickr.com/photos/hortonheardawho/2643489032/
>> <
>> =========================
>> <
>> Response by Osher Doctorow (mdocto...@ca.rr.com):
>> <
>> Lin Liangtai, I notice that you give .tw in your email address, so
>> you're apparently from Taiwan.
>> <
>> NASA has done a lot of good things, but there is a strong tendency
>> especially among engineers to "do-it-yourself" without consulting
>> outsiders, or at most consulting internal "insiders" belonging to
>> whatever disciplines or fields have been hired already.
>> <
>> I discussed that some years ago with my wife's uncle, who was a
>> retired manager from Hughes Aircraft, and I asked him whether
>> inventions and discoveries could not be accelerated very much if more
>> interdisciplinary people and "second opinions" even in the same
>> discipline were hired, especially with very different viewpoints, and
>> he answered rather indirectly, "No."
>> <
>> He was an old man even then, and now that I am 69 years old and
>> realize how little Big Corporations and Big Government in the USA care
>> about interdisciplinary work and highly divergent opinions, as well as
>> ignoring a large number of Seniors with accumulated Wisdom and
>> Experience who have retired.
>> <
>> I think that he had just given up hope. Â He was a Monarchist who
>> believed in the Tsar of Russia,
>> and from what I have seen from the ineptitude of Civilian Democracy in
>> Wartime in fighting Terrorism and
>> enemy propaganda, he was probably even right about Monarchy at least
>> in Wartime.
>> <
>> ============================
>> <
>> This is Ed Conrad's posting in reference to Lin Liangtai's
>> original posting about his discovery of a blood vessel
>> in reddish dirt during the Mars Rover project:
>> <
>> Lin Liangtai , an honest and courageous scientific
>> investigator in Taipei, Taiwan, posted the following
>> DYNAMITE message to the sci.med newsgroup.
>> <
>> IT DESERVES A LOT MORE ATTENTION
>> Â -- and we'll make sure that it gets it.
>> <
>> ================================
>> THE ORIGINAL POSTING BY LIN LIANGTAI
>> ================================
>> <
>> Newsgroups: sci.med
>> From: Lin Liangtai yahoo.com.tw>
>> Date: Wed, 2 Jul 2008 23:13:53 -0700 (PDT)
>> Local: Thurs, Jul 3 2008 2:13 am
>> Subject: Ed's fossilized blood vessel found on Mars
>> <
>> NASA just released a micrograph showing a vessel-like object (Fig. 1)
>> in the scoop of Phoenix Mars Lander.
>> <
>> That object closely resembles blood vessel remains
>> found in a Carboniferous human calvarium fossil owned
>> by Mr. Ed Conrad of Shenandoah, Pennsylvania (Fig. 2
>> for comparison).
>> <
>> The amazing thing is these two fossils are wonderfully preserved for 3
>> bllion years and 300 million years, respectively. Who can do that?
>> <
>> Fig. 1:http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/images/press/RAC_SSI_PR_Sol...
>> <
>> Fig. 2:http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?i=lin440315&b=19&f=1328514833&p=36
>> <
>> ===========================
>> <
>> Lin Liangtai's intensive research performed on photos,
>> etc., released by NASA, indicates that Mars definitely
>> once had life.
>> <
>> And, based on remarkable photos that appear
>> to reveal the remnants of handmade structures
>> and possibly even cities, it must have included
>> INTELLIGENT LIFE (something sorely lacking
>> on Planet Earthling)..
>> <
>> Ed Conradhttp://www.edconrad.com
>> <> EDUCATION NEWS GROUPS
<
Yes, BoobTube,
You posted seven words and three of them
are either misspelled or incorrect. You
also forgot the question mark.
You're an embarrasment to human intelligence
but, nevertheless,still have a pleasant day.
-- Ed Conrad