There is always room for skeptics, and, in planetary science where data are few, lots of room. Planetary scientists sometimes forget the tenuousness of their postulates, and accept theory as fact. We see this whenever we hear the "our model proves ...." statement. When a model is generally accepted, the skeptics become troublemaking iconoclasts.
I "believe" there was water because we have lots of water from the outer solar system to the Earth, with most of the small outerplanetary bodies being about half water, Europa being a little leaner. Nonetheless, it is annoying when the Mars folks use the term "visual evidence of water" when they are interpreting the MGS photos.
Chris
Michael Turner wrote:
Not to be the killjoy troublemaker (who, me?), but what I mainly see in this announcement is evidence of *liquid* movement. Isn't "standing body of liquid" the safer hypothesis?
== You are subscribed to the Europa Icepick mailing list: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Project information and list (un)subscribe info: http://klx.com/europa/
