THE EDWARDS CANALPHOTO ENHANCEMENT 1
CREDIT: Liz EdwardsUFORC thanks NASA & Liz Edwards for photographs
Life as we know it could not exist without one important ingredient: water. Scientists agree that in order for life to have existed on Mars, water would have to be present at one time or another. Here is a photo of what appears to be a martian canal, or river. Please note that towards the inside of the bend in this depression is a smooth crescent of martian soil. This is good evidence that hydraulic action had made this ancient beach by depositing silt or other material along this stretch of the canal. This would be a natural process in the evolution of a river, and it appears to be the case here. This is evidence that not only did life exist here at one time, but may continue to thrive somewhere on or in the planet. Who's to say that the martian inhabitants didn't go underground when their planet began actively dying. I theorize that the gravitational field of the planet was much stronger at one time, which would support the hypothesis that life existed on Mars. A gravitational field is now believed to be a crucial part of a life supporting atmosphere. It is evident from the numerous meteor impact craters, that the atmosphere is insufficient to protect the planet from significant meteor intrusion at present. But there may have been an adequate gravity field to support an atmosphere at one time.
THE EDWARDS CANAL CREDIT: Liz Edwards
COPYRIGHT (c) 1998 LIZ EDWARDS
EDWARDS CANAL RESTORATION
Here is Liz Edward's idea of what Mars may have looked like at one time. She says that the canal photo was "enhanced to what Mars may've looked like at one time." The Edwards Canal is named after Liz Edwards, scientist. She has shown that this was probably some form of river or conduit for water at one time in Mars' past. This photograph was taken from the Warrego. Valles in Mars' southern hemisphere, located between Aonia Terra and Icaria Planum. There is mounting evidence that a race of intelligent beings had existed on Mar at one time. Evidence gathered from the Russian Phobos probe would suggest that life may still exist there, in a subterranean world. Scientists believe that many life-forms that exist here on Earth may have originated on Mars or some other planet. Simple organisms and plants, such as mushrooms and other
fungii may also have originated from outer space. They would have to tolerate extremes in heat and cold, which are NOT very conducive to MOST living organisms. The microbes that scientists recovered from the
Martian meteorite fits that profile.