Mars: Mysteries of the Red Planet - 6 Minute English

60,277 views ・ 2022-03-17

BBC Learning English


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Hello.
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This is 6 Minute English
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from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Neil.
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And I'm Sam.
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In this programme we'll be
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discussing our closest neighbour
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in the solar system - the
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planet Mars.
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Often called the 'Red Planet',
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Mars has been in the news a
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lot recently with three separate
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missions being sent to explore
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the planet's surface in 2021.
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Our fascination with
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the Red Planet
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has given birth to
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some interesting art over the
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years.
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This includes music,
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such as David Bowie's 1973
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hit, Life on Mars?, and countless
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films, from 1938's, Mars Attacks!,
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to the 2015 blockbuster,
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The Martian.
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But human interest in Mars
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goes back much earlier.
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Ancient civilisations, like the
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Maya of central America observed
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the planet's colour and recorded
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its movements, just like modern
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astronomers - scientists who
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study the universe
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and the stars,
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planets and suns within it.
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Yet despite this, many questions
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remain unanswered.
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What caused
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the marks and scars on
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the planet's surface?
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And the biggest question of all:
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is there life on Mars?
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But before we go on, I have
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another question which needs
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answering, Sam.
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The ancient
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Romans were also interested
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in Mars.
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They even considered
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the planet to be a god - but
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god of what?
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Was Mars
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the Roman god of:
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a) Love?
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b) Fire? or c) War?
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Well, Mars is the 'Red Planet',
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so I guess the answer is
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b) the Roman God of Fire.
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OK, Sam.
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We'll find out the
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answer at the end
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of the programme.
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Whatever the Romans thought,
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civilisations throughout
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history have described looking
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into the night sky and seeing
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a bright, red light.
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But where
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does Mars' characteristic
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colour come from?
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Someone who can answer that
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is Dr Michael Meyer.
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As lead
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scientist on NASA's Mars
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Exploration Programme, he
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spent years observing and
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recording the Red Planet.
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Listen to Dr Meyer in
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conversation with BBC World
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Service programme, The Forum.
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Try to hear the explanation
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he gives for Mars's
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unusual colour.
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One of the distinctive things
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about Mars is that it's red
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so you can see it and
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identify it.
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It looks red
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because of rust - iron oxide
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on the surface, which is red
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and, interestingly that look
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can change.
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And we saw that
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in 2018 when there was a
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global dust storm - Mars,
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instead of looking red
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looked a little orange,
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and that changing of colour
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might have made the
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civilisations watching Mars
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maybe uneasy to see
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something immutable in our
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night sky changing colours.
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Dr Meyer calls Mars's red
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colour distinctive - easy to
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recognise because it's different
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from everything else.
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But did
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you hear why it's red in
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the first place, Sam?
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Yes - it's red
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because of rust -
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a reddish chemical substance
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called iron oxide that occurs
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when metals react with
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water and air.
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The colour of this rust can
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change slightly, from red to
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brown to orange, and Dr Meyer
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thinks these changing colours
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may have worried ancient
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astronomers who believed Mars
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was immutable, or
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never changing.
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Unlike ancient civilisations,
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modern astronomers have sent
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satellites to land on Mars
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and explore its surface.
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And although no human has
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set foot on the Red Planet
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so far, we know a lot
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about conditions there.
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So, in the words of
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David Bowie: is there
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life on Mars?
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Well, that all depends on
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finding water.
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Water is life,
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and as Dr Meyer told BBC
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World Service's, The
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Forum, with water
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anything is possible.
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And from all that we have
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learned from astrobiology,
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life is amazingly adaptable,
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but it still needs water.
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So that's why water
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is the key.
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So, finding liquid water
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on Mars, whether or not
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it's now or whether or
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not it's in the past,
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tells you that you
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potentially have a
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habitable environment,
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some place that
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could support life and
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perhaps even Martian life.
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Dr Meyer says that life is
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amazingly adaptable - able
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to change in order to survive
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in new situations.
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Finding liquid water could
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make the Red Planet habitable -
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good enough to live on.
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And
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with billionaire businessmen
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like Elon Musk planning
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manned missions to space,
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who knows how long it could
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be before we see
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a human on Mars?
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And who knows what they'd
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find there!
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Tiny worms?
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Little green men?
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Or maybe a Roman god...?
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Ah yes, in your quiz question
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you asked what Mars was the
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Roman god of.
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I guessed
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b) the Roman God of Fire.
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Which was the wrong answer,
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I'm afraid.
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In fact, the
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Romans considered Mars their
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God of War, and sacrificed
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wild animals to him such
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as wolves, bears and,
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strangely, woodpeckers!
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OK, Neil let's recap the
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vocabulary from this
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programme on the Red Planet,
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Mars, starting with
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astronomer - someone who
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studies the stars, planets
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and moons in our universe.
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If something is distinctive,
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it's easily recognisable
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because it's different
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from everything else.
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Rust, or iron oxide, is
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a red coloured chemical
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that occurs when metals
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react with water and air.
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Immutable means
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never changing.
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Something which is adaptable
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can easily change to deal
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with new circumstances.
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And finally, habitable means
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good enough to live in.
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That's all we have time for.
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Bye for now!
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Goodbye!
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