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قراءة كتاب Mars and its Mystery

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Mars and its Mystery

Mars and its Mystery

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MARS AND ITS MYSTERY



LOWELL'S GLOBE OF MARS, 1903. Frontispiece

MARS
AND ITS MYSTERY

BY
EDWARD S. MORSE
Member National Academy of Sciences

Author of "Japanese Homes and their Surroundings,"
"Glimpses of China and Chinese Homes," etc.

ILLUSTRATED

BOSTON
LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
1906


Copyright, 1906,
By Little, Brown, and Company.


All rights reserved

Published October, 1906

THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U. S. A.


To
PERCIVAL LOWELL
WHO HAS BY HIS ENERGY AND SCIENTIFIC SPIRIT
ESTABLISHED A NEW STANDARD FOR
THE STUDY OF MARS
THIS BOOK
IS AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED


PREFACE

The following pages have been written for the general reader. The controversies over the interpretation of the curious markings of Mars and the wide divergence of opinion as to their nature first turned my attention to the matter. The question of intelligence in other worlds is of perennial interest to everyone, and that question may possibly be settled by an unprejudiced study of our neighboring planet Mars. Knowing the many analogies between Mars and the Earth, we are justified in asking what conditions really exist in Mars. Instead of flouting at every attempt to interpret the various and complicated markings of its surface, we should soberly consider any rational explanation of these enigmas from the postulate that the two spheres, so near together in space, cannot be so far apart physically, and from the fact that as intelligence is broadly modifying the appearance of the surface of the Earth, a similar intelligence may also be marking the face of Mars.

A student familiar with a general knowledge of the heavens, a fair acquaintance with the surface features of the Earth, with an appreciation of the doctrine of probabilities, and capable of estimating the value of evidence, is quite as well equipped to examine and discuss the nature of the markings of Mars as the astronomer. If, furthermore, he is gifted with imagination and is free from all prejudice in the matter, he may have a slight advantage. Astronomers are probably the most exact of all students as to their facts, and in this discussion there is no attempt to introduce evidence they do not supply, as the frequent quotations from their writings will show.

Having studied Mars through nearly one presentation of the planet with the great refractor at the Lowell Observatory, what I saw with my own eyes, uninfluenced by what others saw, will be presented in a short chapter at the end of this book.

I wish to express my obligations to Professor Percival Lowell for the privileges of his observatory, for many of the illustrations in this book, and for his unbounded hospitality during my visit to Flagstaff. I am also deeply indebted to Mr. Russell Robb for valuable assistance during the preparation of the manuscript.

E. S. M.

Salem, Massachusetts,
October, 1906.


CONTENTS

    Page
I. Introduction 1
II. Immeasurable Distances of Space 7
III. Other Worlds Inhabited 14
IV. Lowell's Book on Mars 31
V. Testimony of Astronomers 51
VI. The Study of Planetary Markings 70
VII. Difficulties of Seeing 79
VIII. Variation in Drawing 94
IX. Theories Regarding the Canals 100
X. Comments and Criticism 125
XI. Atmosphere and Moisture 134
XII. Notes on Irrigation 141
XIII. Variety of Conditions under which Life Exists 147
XIV. My Own Work 158
XV. What the Martians Might

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