T
tampaDreamer
Guest
Terraforming has the romantic aspect of 'really' creating another planet where we can walk around free, etc. However, consider that you're essentially make a planet-sized biosphere when you decide to terraform a planet. Not only that, but you're dealing with an environment open to variable conditions of martian crust, space, etc. Making a biosphere the size of... say.. a small town is going to be 100 times easier than making a planet-sized biosphere. The only increased variable cost of the smaller biosphere is the walls. Terraforming mars would be much more likely to be accomplished by people and industries living there than by dropping robo-factories from orbit which were launched from earth, imo.
In the long term, terraforming is also much more dangerous than making enclosed biospheres. What if we miss something, what if we are unaware of some consequence? If we screw up and contaminate all that water, or worse lose a lot of it to space, we will have destroyed the most valuable resource on mars.
A more measured approach would be saner.. but maybe not as much fun for the scientists.
In the long term, terraforming is also much more dangerous than making enclosed biospheres. What if we miss something, what if we are unaware of some consequence? If we screw up and contaminate all that water, or worse lose a lot of it to space, we will have destroyed the most valuable resource on mars.
A more measured approach would be saner.. but maybe not as much fun for the scientists.