
Mars Week!
Last week was Mars Week at Oxford Area School in the South Island. It was a great week running Mars Missions and learning all about Mars.

Last week was Mars Week at Oxford Area School in the South Island. It was a great week running Mars Missions and learning all about Mars.

Food habits on Earth developed according to availability of food. But now they are part of the cultural landscape. What happens when you move countries? O

We have to leave our secure little rock and spread our species around the universe if we want to survive.

Everyone knows about water on Mars, but very few people could brag like I can that they have discovered Hot Chocolate on Mars!

“People believe they can simply go to Mars, pull out some inflatable greenhouses and start living there in happiness and plenty of oxygen… well, I don’t really think it works like that!”

(And we can do something about it.)

Life needs CHNOPS, the six essential elements Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, and Sulphur. Curiosity found them on ancient Mars, but a new study shows Earth was born without them. Only a lucky impact with Theia made our world habitable. In contrast, Venus never stood a chance. Meet the three planetary siblings and discover why only Earth became a cradle for life.

Mars’s mantle contains ancient fragments up to 4km wide from its formation—preserved like geological fossils from the planet’s violent early history.

Cosmic rays are hitting the atmosphere constantly. One of the products of the collisions is muons, and we can detect muons on the surface of the Earth to learn about the cosmic rays.
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