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muriel_volestrangler

(102,476 posts)
Tue Oct 2, 2012, 05:32 AM Oct 2012

Alfred Russel Wallace, 1907: Is Mars habitable?

via Why Evolution Is True, we find that a website has been set up with the works of Alfred Russel Wallace, the co-discoverer of evolution by natural selection. I think it's brilliant that, about 50 years after that, he was still publishing - in this case, a sceptical look at Lowell's claims of advanced life on Mars. What's more, look at what he deploys in his criticism - Stefan's law of radiation, the loss of lighter molecules to space from planets with lower gravity, and the greenhouse effect! Not bad, for a 19th century naturalist.

Is Mars habitable? A critical examination of Professor Percival Lowell's Book "Mars and its canals," with an alternative explanation.

THIS small volume was commenced as a review article on Professor Percival Lowell's book, Mars and its Canals, with the object of showing that the large amount of new and interesting facts contained in this work did not invalidate the conclusion I had reached in 1902, and stated in my book on Man's Place in the Universe, that Mars was not habitable.

But the more complete presentation of the opposite view in the volume now under discussion required a more detailed examination of the various physical. problems involved, and as the subject is one of great, popular, as well as scientific interest, I determined to undertake the task.

This was rendered the more necessary by the fact that in July last Professor Lowell published in the Philosophical Magazine an elaborate mathematical article claiming to demonstrate that, notwithstanding its much greater distance from the sun and its excessively thin atmosphere, Mars possessed a climate on the average equal to that of the south of England, and in its polar and sub-polar regions even less severe than that of the earth. Such a contention of course required to be dealt with, and led me to collect information bearing upon temperature in all its aspects, and so enlarging my criticism that I saw it would be necessary to issue it in book form.

Two of my mathematical friends have pointed out the chief omission which vitiates Professor Lowell's mathematical conclusions —that of a failure to recognise the very large conservative and cumulative effect of a dense atmosphere. This very point however I had already myself discussed in Chapter VI., and by means of some remarkable researches on the heat of the moon and an investigation of the causes of its very low temperature, I have, I think, demonstrated the incorrectness of Mr. Lowell's results. In my last chapter, in which I briefly summarise the whole argument, I have further strengthened the case for very severe cold in Mars, by adducing the rapid lowering of temperature universally caused by diminution of atmospheric pressure, as manifested in the well-known phenomenon of temperate climates at moderate heights even close to the equator, cold climates at greater heights even on extensive plateaux, culminating in arctic climates and perpetual snow at heights where the air is still far denser than it is on the surface of Mars. This argument itself is, in my opinion, conclusive ; but it is enforced by two others equally complete, neither of which is adequately met by Mr. Lowell.

The careful examination which I have been led to give to the whole of the phenomena which Mars presents, and especially to the discoveries of Mr. Lowell, has led me to what I hope will be considered a satisfactory physical explanation of them. This explanation, which occupies the whole of my seventh chapter, is founded upon a special mode of origin for Mars, derived from the Meteoritic Hypothesis, now very widely adopted by astronomers and physicists. Then, by a comparison with certain well-known and widely spread geological phenomena, I show how the great features of Mars—the 'canals' and 'oases'—may have been caused. This chapter will perhaps be the most interesting to the general reader, as furnishing a quite natural explanation of features of the planet which have been termed 'non-natural' by Mr. Lowell.

Incidentally, also, I have been led to an explanation of the highly volcanic nature of the moon's surface. This seems to me absolutely to require some such origin as Sir George Darwin has given it, and thus furnishes corroborative proof of the accuracy of the hypothesis that our moon has had an unique origin among the known satellites, in having been thrown off from the earth itself.


Not everything is compatible with modern knowledge (I think "the highly volcanic nature of the moon's surface" refers to a hypothesis that most Moon craters are volcanic, not meteoric; and Sir George Darwin (son of Charles) suggested the Moon formed from just the centrifugal force from a rapidly rotating molten Earth), but I think it's still interesting to see a good bit of scientific criticism of Lowell's hand-waving (eg his claim that the thin atmosphere of Mars would be rich in both water vapour and carbon dioxide, despite the former being a light molecule, and his argument for more carbon dioxide being that it's a heavy molecule).
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Alfred Russel Wallace, 1907: Is Mars habitable? (Original Post) muriel_volestrangler Oct 2012 OP
Thanks for the A R Wallace site references etc! rerevisionist Oct 2012 #1

rerevisionist

(4 posts)
1. Thanks for the A R Wallace site references etc!
Mon Oct 29, 2012, 12:55 PM
Oct 2012

I'm grateful for your noting the works of Wallace are online. I checked, being naturally sceptical, and indeed they all seem to be there, and free, in PDF format. No need even to sign in.

Many people still don't realise Wallace was probably the inventor of the theory of evolution, but, being on the other side of the globe at the time, Darwin rigged up a meeting to pretend he had the idea, too. (See Brackman's book - with a hopelessly poor title imho - 'A Curious Arrangement'.

This of course suggests a re-examination of his works is overdue & in fact there's a lot of interesting material, including his autobiography, his scepticism about vaccination against smallpox, his natural history work. He also wrote on land nationalisation and other social issues. He seemed however to believe in spiritualism, though I haven't read him to find out if he suspended science to do this.


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