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| “Night sky from a lonely beach in New Zealand”. Milky Way with the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds |
Taken by Ekant Veer, professor at University of Canterbury, New Zealand.
It’s taken from Birdlings Flat, near Lake Forsythe (!) located right at the base of the Banks Peninsula just south of Christchurch.
Places my ancestors came to in the mid 19th century.
The Magellanic “Clouds” — actually galaxies — are two of our closest galactic neighbours in our Local Group of galaxies. In about a billion years they’ll merge into our own Milky Way, to become part of our spiral arms and add to the 400 billion or so Stars we already have.
I’ve looked at this very same night sky, the Milky Way, the Magellanic Clouds, from offshore East Coast Australia, in a racing yacht, Sydney-Hobart. The southern night skies are glorious.
Are we alone? Are we, mammals on Earth, alone in this vast universe? I used to think “certainly not”. Star number: at least 8 x 10 with 23 zeros. And more planets than even this vast number of Stars. What are the odds? Surely there must be life, intelligent life, elsewhere! Surely….
But maybe not. The very-very-very odd combination of random events that led to Homo Sapiens on Planet Earth may well be too random for even such a vast number of Stars and Planets to guarantee another civilisation. We may well be alone. Even if not alone, we’ll never be able to communicate with an intelligent alien species. The distances are simply too vast. The physics too brutal.
We, Homo Sapiens, are the consciousness of the universe. We are the only one we know, so far. We may very possibly the only one. Better care for it. Better nurture “the light of consciousness”.








