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Anonymous
4chan is too fucking slow to have an /hr/
>> Anonymous
this ins't /b/
/hr/ is not designed to be downloaded 5 pages every 30 minutes
>> Anonymous
I have a 8mbit link and /hr/ can't feed me the images fast enough ;)
>> Anonymous
>>66780
Maybe if you didnt post from Mars you'd have a faster connection. Duh.
>> Anonymous
Mars? That ironball's been stuck with primitive post-DSL hookups for centuries. Besides, the view from Venus is much nicer.
>> Anonymous
swear to god im watching the 'NIN to mars' video on youtube right when i got here. made of win and bump
>> Anonymous
This is Optimus Prime in transformed mode.
>> Anonymous
Johnny five Mars edition
>> Zdenek
The render is suspicious. There shouldn't be any atmosphere on Mars, so I think that the shadows should be entirely black. Like on the Moon.
>> Anonymous
>>67190
You are an idiot. Mars very much has an atmosphere, only it is lethal to humans and most terranean life as-is. That is why mars is not completely ridden with small meteor impact craters like the moon. (They burn up in before impacting)
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>67292

actually, mars is very ridden with impact craters, but, yes, not as much as the moon. It definately has several times the amount visible on earth though.

The atmosphere on mars is several times thinner than earth's atmosphere (around 100 times thinner), so the atmosphere does not protect much from asteroid impacts anymore. Mars was most likely covered with water and a dense atmosphere before though, so most of its impact craters are from present to around a few hundred million years ago, while the ones on the moon are from present to ~4 billion years ago. That's why there are more on the moon.

Also, a comparison between earth's and mars' atmosphere <---
The earth's atmosphere is 79% nitrogen, 20% oxygen, and 1% everything else, while mars' atmosphere is mostly carbon dioxide.

[/end science lesson]
>> Anonymous
It's </science lesson>, you are mae of poo and phail.