We Are the Martians: Seeing Is Believing episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 7, 2017 · 46 MIN

We Are the Martians: Seeing Is Believing

from Mars · host BBC Radio 4

Sarah Dillon begins a series revelling in the Mars of imagination, science and history.We are the Martians, perhaps the only consciousness the Red Planet has ever had. The ancients wove their own mythological stories about Mars, its dim redness and uncertain path visible to the naked eye. In the 19th century new, powerful telescopes scrutinized the Red Planet and astronomers considered the possibilities of life on Mars. There was, in fact, a kind of mapping war to name and identify features on the planet.When the Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli produced a series of maps in the 1870s featuring dark channels or "canali", a powerful story began to develop: Mars was a dying planet, older, perhaps inhabited . Then, from the 1890s, American amateur astronomer Percival Lowell, using his state of the art telescope in his brand new observatory high up in Flagstaff, Arizona, convinced millions that this "dying" planet was home to a doomed civilization struggling to maintain life through an elaborate system of canals. Lowell was a supreme popularizer of science, commanding huge audiences despite the severe doubts of many in the scientific community.Worldwide, Lowell's myth sparked volumes of popular fiction and when failed salesman Edgar Rice Burroughs penned the first of his Barsoom adventures in 1911, Martian fantasy truly took off. Its literary spell remains unbroken. Even after the Mariner probes and Viking Lander finally revealed Mars was red but dead, the Old Mars of our dreams would return.Sarah Dillon travels to Flagstaff and the analogue Martian landscape of ochre Arizonan desert and talks to a host of Red Planet writers.Producer: Mark Burman.

Sarah Dillon begins a series revelling in the Mars of imagination, science and history.We are the Martians, perhaps the only consciousness the Red Planet has ever had. The ancients wove their own mythological stories about Mars, its dim redness and uncertain path visible to the naked eye. In the 19th century new, powerful telescopes scrutinized the Red Planet and astronomers considered the possibilities of life on Mars. There was, in fact, a kind of mapping war to name and identify features on the planet.When the Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli produced a series of maps in the 1870s featuring dark channels or "canali", a powerful story began to develop: Mars was a dying planet, older, perhaps inhabited . Then, from the 1890s, American amateur astronomer Percival Lowell, using his state of the art telescope in his brand new observatory high up in Flagstaff, Arizona, convinced millions that this "dying" planet was home to a doomed civilization struggling to maintain life through an elaborate system of canals. Lowell was a supreme popularizer of science, commanding huge audiences despite the severe doubts of many in the scientific community.Worldwide, Lowell's myth sparked volumes of popular fiction and when failed salesman Edgar Rice Burroughs penned the first of his Barsoom adventures in 1911, Martian fantasy truly took off. Its literary spell remains unbroken. Even after the Mariner probes and Viking Lander finally revealed Mars was red but dead, the Old Mars of our dreams would return.Sarah Dillon travels to Flagstaff and the analogue Martian landscape of ochre Arizonan desert and talks to a host of Red Planet writers.Producer: Mark Burman.

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We Are the Martians: Seeing Is Believing

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A time not to be forgotten zhanglaiwan literature:The Wisdom of Father Brown By: G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)Adam Bede By: George Eliot (1819-1880)The Chessmen of Mars By: Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950)Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm By: Kate Douglas Wiggin (1856-1923)The Rosary By: Florence Louisa Barclay (1862-1921)A Girl of the Limberlost By: Gene Stratton-Porter (1863-1924)Diary of a U-boat Commander By: Sir Stephen King-HallBrewster's Millions By: George Barr McCutcheon (1866-1928)Fables for the Frivolous By: Guy Wetmore Carryl (1873-1904)Julius Caesar By: William Shakespeare (1564-1616)The Abbots Ghost or Maurice Treherne Temptation By: Louisa May AlcottFavorite Chapters Collection By: VariousConfessions By: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)32 Caliber By: Donald McGibneyThe Happy Prince and Other Tales By: Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)Helen's Babies By: John HabbertonMiddlemarch By: George EliotCrome Yellow By: Aldous Hu Literary fan group luohuiting LiteraryRuth By: Elizabeth Gaskell (1810-1865)Edison's Conquest of Mars By: Garrett P. Serviss (1851-1929)The Cruise of the Snark By: Jack LondonThe Way of All Flesh By: Samuel ButlerLone Star Planet By: H. Beam Piper and John J. McGuireAll Round the Year By: Edith Nesbit (1858-1924)Looking Backward: 2000-1887 By: Edward Bellamy (1850-1898)The Dragon and the Raven By: George Alfred Henty (1832-1902)A Boy's Will By: Robert FrostLavender and Old Lace By: Myrtle Reed (1874-1911)The People of the Abyss By: Jack London (1876-1916)Chamber Music By: James Joyce (1882-1941)The Drums of Jeopardy By: Harold MacGrath (1871-1932)Venus in Furs By: Leopold von Sacher-MasochGulliver of Mars By: Edwin L. ArnoldSt. Bartholomew's Eve By: George Alfred Henty (1832-1902)Told after Supper By: Jerome K. Jerome (1859-1927)Security By: Poul Anderson (1926-2001)Trials and Confessions of a Housekeep Anatomy of Next Founders Fund In the second season of Anatomy of Next, explore every aspect of going to Mars, transforming it into a habitable world, and building a new branch of human civilization. How do we bring a cold, dead planet back to life? Can we build an atmosphere on Mars, thaw the frozen plains, and build an ocean? How do we seed a barren land with life, and make a red Mars green? Then, it’s everything from politics and education to money, music, and architecture. What does it mean to be human on an alien world? Life on mars Liav Soued Life on mars

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This episode was published on March 7, 2017.

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Sarah Dillon begins a series revelling in the Mars of imagination, science and history.We are the Martians, perhaps the only consciousness the Red Planet has ever had. The ancients wove their own mythological stories about Mars, its dim redness and...

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