We'll live in a lava tube so craters won't destroy our things.
Problem If a metor like Hellas Planitia hit's us, it can destroy us and our things. | Solutions
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Must Pack Up Cars + Rovers Are Packed Up Into House
Mars gets hit by 200 craters every year and it's pretty easy to get hit by one. There are two solutions we can think of now. We can build a dome, which may break. Or we can go underground. Underground the may be bacteria that can give us diseases or we can collapse. You can also run into lava if you're not careful enough. There is also a benifit to living underground that we can find water. The best solution is probably a dome around a special house so if a metor hits, it may not harm us or our objects.
Enter NASA's alternative "kinetic interceptor," which would deflect an incoming asteroid by smacking into it. Like shooting a rolling bowling ball with a pellet gun, the idea is to just barely nudge the asteroid off course -- but not hard enough to fracture it. According to Space.com, a mere 1 mile-per-hour (1.6 kilometer-per-hour) impact would be enough to divert an asteroid by 170,000 miles (273,500 kilometers) if we hit it 20 years before the predicted collision.
- Hellas Planitia is the largest crater on Mars.
-This is where we'd live in.