Only if they immigrated there from Mars.
By definition, Martians are from Mars.
Oh, and if you know it's an alien flying saucer, it's not a UFO.
The [insert location of choice here] I walked into was very plutonian - dark, damp, and terribly cold.
There are two adjectives for Pluto, depending on context: Plutonic: relating to the Greek god Pluto Plutonian: relating to the planet Pluto
The Raven : "Night's Plutonian Shore" .
Yes, Pluto does indeed have a great many myths and legends. Pluto is said to have Martians that will invade Earth for example.
The sidereal rotation period of Pluto is about 6.39 Earth days.Therefore, 31 Plutonian days is equal to (31 * 6.39) = 198.09 Earth days.Also note that 31 Earth days would be equal to (31 / 6.39) = 4.85 Plutonian days.
"The Night's Plutonian Shore" could refer to the afterlife. Pluto was the Roman God of the underworld. The entire poem revolves around the lost love Lenore. The raven is a reminder or a messenger from beyond the curtain of death to the unnamed protagonist."Plutonian Shore" has nothing to do with the now dwarf planet Pluto, as previously stated. Pluto was not discovered until March of 1930. 85 years after the publication of The Raven.The dwarf planet Pluto has nothing to do with this poem. Pluto was another name for Hades, ruler of the underworld in Greek religion/mythology. Basically he was the devil where as his brother, Zeus, ruled heaven. As stated above "The Night's Plutonian Shore" could refer to the afterlife, because the root word is Pluto, referring to Hades. I believe that the shore part is creativity at work, but I'm probably wrong, that's just what I want to think. In poems you have to wonder why the poet choose those words, so I believe the first answer is right, that the raven is a reminder or a messenger from beyond the curtain of death to the unnamed protagonist.The narrator believes the raven is from the shore of the River Styx in the Underworld, the abode of the dead in Greek mythology. "Plutonian" is a reference to Pluto, the god of the Underworld.
no we have discovered 25 km underground the martians would burnto death
Plutonian Ode was created in 1978.
Yes. Technecly, if you count the miroscopic bacteria that live there
There is no life on Pluto, that we know of.
It takes Pluto 90,588 (Earth) days - or 248 (Earth) years - to make one full orbit around the sun. If one day on Pluto is equal to 153 Earth hours (or 6.375 Earth days), then one year on Pluto would therefore be equal to ~14,210 "Pluto days" (i.e. Pluto makes one full rotation around it's axis ~14,210 times for every full orbit it makes around the sun).
No one lives in or on Pluto. No one has visited Pluto.