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       EUROPA

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Europa a moon of Jupiter

Did you know there are algae living in the bottom of our oceans that photosynthesize using only the Infra Red slight spectrum?

Did you also know that Jupiter radiates about 1.6 times as much heat, in the form of infrared energy, as it receives from the Sun?

Did you happen to read about how Constant gravitational pressures on the icy surface of Jupiter’s moon Europa generate much more heat than previously thought?

Or how Europas ocean under the ice stays liquefied, due to tidal pressures heating the moons core, and that pockets of ice on the moons surface are turned to mush by Jupiters gravitational field, allowing liquid to interact with the Oxygen rich atmosphere?

When NASA finally grow a pair and admit that the red colouring of Europa is in fact a form of algae that uses infra red light to photosynthesize, instead of Ultraviolet light i think the penny will drop with the Majority of you, that there is Life out there and as i have said Nature is Universal Nature will find a way to create life using various combinations of chemicals and particles.

Why get exited about some tiny algae ?

"Small things lead to bigger things"

Some of the biggest animals in our ocean feed off tiny algae like the Whale shark The Baskin Shark and the Mega Mouth shark which can grow up to 26 feet long

Algae is the staple diet of a marine eco system on Earth animals such as Krill feed on algae the krill in their millions are a vital food source for whales seals and fish

Nasa and the rest of the astro biological community need to come clean and admit what it is they have found so we as a Civilization can come to terms with that we are not the only living organisms in the universe and that the burning question we all seek the answer to can finally be answered

We are Not Alone

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"Life thrives in ice, it doesn't mind at all," said Lipps, whose interest in single-celled organisms drew him to consider the possibility of life on other planets, which is likely to be more akin to bacteria than to humans. "In Antarctica, every phylum of algae, protozoan, bacteria and animal lives in the ice, many of them in brine channels that don't freeze."

 

paleobiologist Jere H. Lipps, professor of integrative biology at the University of California, Berkeley.

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