NASA Images Suggest Water Still Flows on Mars
Posted on: Wednesday, 6 December 2006, 12:40 CST
NASA photographs have revealed bright new deposits seen in two gullies on Mars that suggest water carried sediment through them sometime during the past seven years.
"These observations give the strongest evidence to date that water still flows occasionally on the surface of Mars," said Michael Meyer, lead scientist for NASA's Mars Exploration Program, Washington.
Liquid water, as opposed to the water ice and water vapor known to exist at Mars, is considered necessary for life. The new findings heighten intrigue about the potential for microbial life on Mars. The Mars Orbiter Camera on NASA's Mars Global Surveyor provided the new evidence of the deposits in images taken in 2004 and 2005.
"The shapes of these deposits are what you would expect to see if the material were carried by flowing water," said Michael Malin of Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego. "They have finger-like branches at the downhill end and easily diverted around small obstacles." Malin is principal investigator for the camera and lead author of a report about the findings published in the journal Science.
The atmosphere of Mars is so thin and the temperature so cold that liquid water cannot persist at the surface. It would rapidly evaporate or freeze. Researchers propose that water could remain liquid long enough, after breaking out from an underground source, to carry debris downslope before totally freezing. The two fresh deposits are each several hundred meters or yards long.
The light tone of the deposits could be from surface frost continuously replenished by ice within the body of the deposit. Another possibility is a salty crust, which would be a sign of water's effects in concentrating the salts. If the deposits had resulted from dry dust slipping down the slope, they would likely be dark, based on the dark tones of dust freshly disturbed by rover tracks, dust devils and fresh craters on Mars.
Mars Global Surveyor has discovered tens of thousands of gullies on slopes inside craters and other depressions on Mars. Most gullies are at latitudes of 30 degrees or higher. Malin and his team first reported the discovery of the gullies in 2000. To look for changes that might indicate present-day flow of water, his camera team repeatedly imaged hundreds of the sites. One pair of images showed a gully that appeared after mid-2002. That site was on a sand dune, and the gully-cutting process was interpreted as a dry flow of sand.
Today's announcement is the first to reveal newly deposited material apparently carried by fluids after earlier imaging of the same gullies. The two sites are inside craters in the Terra Sirenum and the Centauri Montes regions of southern Mars.
"These fresh deposits suggest that at some places and times on present-day Mars, liquid water is emerging from beneath the ground and briefly flowing down the slopes. This possibility raises questions about how the water would stay melted below ground, how widespread it might be, and whether there's a below-ground wet habitat conducive to life. Future missions may provide the answers," said Malin.
Besides looking for changes in gullies, the orbiter's camera team assessed the rate at which new impact craters appear. The camera photographed approximately 98 percent of Mars in 1999 and approximately 30 percent of the planet was photographed again in 2006. The newer images show 20 fresh impact craters, ranging in diameter from 7 feet (2 meters) to 486 feet (148 meters) that were not present approximately seven years earlier. These results have important implications for determining the ages of features on the surface of Mars. These results also approximately match predictions and imply that Martian terrain with few craters is truly young.
Mars Global Surveyor began orbiting Mars in 1997. The spacecraft is responsible for many important discoveries. NASA has not heard from the spacecraft since early November. Attempts to contact it continue. Its unprecedented longevity has allowed monitoring Mars for over several years past its projected lifetime.
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, manages the Mars Global Surveyor mission for the NASA Science Mission Directorate, Washington.
Image Captions
Figure A: This figure shows the southeast wall of the unnamed crater in the Centauri Montes region, as it appeared in August 1999, and later in September 2005. No light-toned deposit was present in August 1999, but appeared by February 2004. The 300-meter scale bar represents 328 yards.
Figure B: This picture is a colorized view of the light-toned gully deposit, draped over a topographic image derived from Mars Global Surveyor's Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter data. The color comes from a table derived from the colors of Mars as seen by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment.
Figure C: The third figure is a mosaic of several Mars Global Surveyor images, colorized using a table derived from Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter camera color data and overlain on a sub-frame of a Mars Odyssey Thermal Emission Imaging System image. The 1-kilometer scale bar represents about 0.62 miles.
Figure D: The fourth figure is a colorized view of the light-toned gully deposit as viewed from an oblique perspective, draped over topography derived from Mars Global Surveyor's Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter data. The color comes from a table derived from the colors of Mars as seen by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter camera.
Figure E: The first picture shows a pair of gully channels that emerge, fully-born at nearly their full width, from beneath small overhangs on the north wall of Dao Vallis. These overhangs are probably created by the presence of a hard-rock layer. Liquid, probably water, percolated through permeable layers just beneath these harder, more resistant rock layers. The arrow points to the place where one of the two neighboring channels emerges. This is a sub-frame of an image acquired on Jan. 10, 2006, located near 34.2 degrees south latitude, 268.1 degrees west longitude. The 150-meter scale bar is about 164 yards wide.
Figure F: The third picture shows a small crater on the rim of a larger crater. Only a small portion of the wall of this larger crater is captured in the image. Immediately beneath the small crater occurs a group of gullies. The presence of these gullies also supports the groundwater hypothesis because impacting meteors will fracture the rocks into which they form a crater. In this case, there would be an initial set of subsurface fractures caused by the large impact that created the original, large crater. Then, when the smaller crater formed, it would have created additional fractures in its vicinity. These extra fractures would then have provided pathways, or conduits, through which ground water would come to the surface on the wall of the larger crater, thus creating the gullies observed. One might speculate that the group of gullies was formed by the impact that made the small crater, because of the heat and fracturing of rock during the impact process. However, the gullies are much younger than the small crater; the ejecta from the small crater has been largely eroded away or buried, and the crater partially filled, while the gullies appear sharp, crisp and fresh. This is a portion of an image located near 33.9 degrees south latitude, 160 degrees west longitude, acquired on March 31, 2006.
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For more information about images from the Mars Orbiter Camera, see http://www.msss.com/mgs/moc/index.html
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User Comments (202)
| 52. |
Posted by Michael Becker on 12/06/2006, 14:04 To work at naza you need to be a confirmed compulsive liar and very creative with clay and a digital camera.. Anyone who believes this is mars? Your DUCK IS OUT!!! |
| 51. |
Posted by RonS on 12/06/2006, 14:03 Makes me wonder if maybe those things that look like big glass tubes really ARE big glass tubes... |
| 50. |
Posted by PHIL Mick on 12/06/2006, 14:03 Sorry Nasa, must have been my pulled drive from the U.S. Open |
| 49. |
Posted by Venetian Blinds on 12/06/2006, 14:02 I think Mars has started crying because it somehow got word that we will pay it a visit soon. I would start crying too. |
| 48. |
Posted by Ken LA on 12/06/2006, 14:00 This is simply impact from the recent GOLF BALL KNOCKED OUT OF EARTH ORBIT...NASA SCORED A HOLE IN ONE...NASA FIX YOUR DIVOT |
| 47. |
Posted by Michael Becker on 12/06/2006, 14:00 Nice job, you guys silly puddy has come a long way!!! Mars eh? Nice try though.. You called a press conference for this? Silly puddy close ups? All I can say is I cant wait for China to REALLY get to Mars and show us how vastly different it looks from your phony images.. |
| 46. |
Posted by Patrick on 12/06/2006, 13:58 Regarding radioboy, the environment on Mars is entirely hostile to complex life. Micorobial life may or may not be found, but mars lacks the necessary cosmic symbioses to sustain complex organisms. SO stop insulting people. Its not nice. And Santa will **** in your stocking! |
| 45. |
Posted by cheese on 12/06/2006, 13:58 Looks like bird ****. |
| 44. |
Posted by Erik on 12/06/2006, 13:57 Good point woohoo. It's not necessarily water -- it could just as easily be a very light olive oil. Or Sprite. |
| 43. |
Posted by Scott on 12/06/2006, 13:55 Why are you stupid liberals even reading anything that requires thought. I'm suprised you havn't blamed Bush for Mars warming and creating the water. |
| 42. |
Posted by pgh_bak on 12/06/2006, 13:53 And tell me, how will this enable the 40% of American youth not getting a high school diploma graduate? And how does this help those in the Central Gulf rebuild? By 2024 this country is going to be a second rate nation, with a population that can't read and conceptualize let alone be adventuring to Mars. |
| 41. |
Posted by Patrick on 12/06/2006, 13:53 Regarding radioboy, the environment on Mars is entirely hostile to complex life. Micorobial life may or may not be found, but mars lacks the necessary cosmic symbioses to sustain complex organisms. SO stop insulting people. Its not nice. And Santa will **** in your stocking! |
| 40. |
Posted by Jealous Venusian on 12/06/2006, 13:51 Steve Shockley- good one. |
| 39. |
Posted by Paul on 12/06/2006, 13:48 It's not water Dallas Dummy. Just a place where they speculate water could have flowed. It's a lot of sensational, speculative guessing designed to get everyone (especially Congress) all twiterpated over the space program. Remember the Mars Rover? What the headlines give the fine print will take away on the back page a few weeks later. |
| 38. |
Posted by Steve on 12/06/2006, 13:47 Wow, you people are kooks (politicaly). Won't have to stay up late tonight for Leno to get my dose of laughter. You people are stinking ridiculous. |
| 37. |
Posted by Bible Bibleson on 12/06/2006, 13:45 The bible says there is life only on earth. If tiny biological life forms on discovered on mars, they were brought there by the heathen rovers. |
| 36. |
Posted by Steve Shockley on 12/06/2006, 13:44 Yes, it's water. Unfortunately the EPA has now declared it a wetland and we can no longer crash probes into it! |
| 35. |
Posted by radioboy on 12/06/2006, 13:44 maybe some of you brainless people should consider that this place we call earth WILL not last forever and we need this type of scientific research to figure out a way to live on mars or any of the planets in our solar system. get over the \"giggle factor\" that the mainstream media constantly feeds you and actually think about this discovery and the future of our loved ones!!!!!!!! |
| 34. |
Posted by Paul on 12/06/2006, 13:43 And if you look really close in the upper right hand corner you can see the ghost of Major Tom. |
| 33. |
Posted by DallasCCWSFan on 12/06/2006, 13:41 Looks like that water has a higher IQ then most of people commenting on this discovery! |
| 32. |
Posted by Paul on 12/06/2006, 13:40 Tell all the queers they are not allowed on Mars and before we know it they will all be there! And take Alec Baldwin with you... |
| 31. |
Posted by Tech on 12/06/2006, 13:39 Lets invade!!! |
| 30. |
Posted by Leland on 12/06/2006, 13:38 This is supposed to be news? It\'s been only 6 years, 4 months, and 13 days since Richard C. Hoagland announced the same thing. See http://www.enterprisemission.com/press-water.html. |
| 29. |
Posted by paul on 12/06/2006, 13:38 Can you say photoshop? |
| 28. |
Posted by Dave on 12/06/2006, 13:37 Bush just dispatched troops there to spread freedom and democracy. |
| 27. |
Posted by SHIRTEES.NET on 12/06/2006, 13:36 Wait, do I see some Zionists setting up camp there? I think they are setting up a Mars Federal Reserve system there, that way when Mars money gets printed, they can get their cut of it. |
| 26. |
Posted by Paul on 12/06/2006, 13:35 Come on you guys, NASA speculations are never wrong. |
| 25. |
Posted by Paul on 12/06/2006, 13:34 The gullies on Mars are from the tears of laughter coming from the giant face they told us about a while back! |
| 24. |
Posted by DCox on 12/06/2006, 13:31 It looks like a debris slide with perma-frost in it. What exactly is new about this discovery? |
| 23. |
Posted by Davenport on 12/06/2006, 13:30 Yeah, a debris slide. Proabably a small asteroid hit it. |
| 22. |
Posted by paul on 12/06/2006, 13:30 When you show someone your bare butt on the moon do they call it earthing? Inquiring minds want to know. |
| 21. |
Posted by doorguy on 12/06/2006, 13:29 Is this breaking story supposed to keep our minds off the Iraq Study Group report? It's not working. |
| 20. |
Posted by Paul on 12/06/2006, 13:29 Maybe we can convince Madonna, Elton and friends that this is the hippest place to live! |
| 19. |
Posted by Brad on 12/06/2006, 13:27 And what's all this talk about a moon base by 2020? Didn't Bond already cover that in the '60's? |
| 18. |
Posted by Paul on 12/06/2006, 13:27 Long live the Far Out Space Nuts! |
| 17. |
Posted by LARRY on 12/06/2006, 13:26 Must be NASA funding time. |
| 16. |
Posted by woohoo ! on 12/06/2006, 13:26 I didn't realize that water is the only substance that flows :) That's the real discovery ! |
| 15. |
Posted by Shipman on 12/06/2006, 13:22 Think of all the social workers and yoof centers this could have financed. Think of the hungry fluffy bunnies. |
| 14. |
Posted by Paul on 12/06/2006, 13:22 Great- enhance a blurry space photo and they have one more reaon to pick our pockets. |
| 13. |
Posted by Ken on 12/06/2006, 13:21 All your base are belong to us |
| 12. |
Posted by Spock on 12/06/2006, 13:19 It's life Jim, but not as we know it. |
| 11. |
Posted by P on 12/06/2006, 13:18 The CIA reports that the Martians are less than 3 years away from going nuclear. |
| 10. |
Posted by Eddie on 12/06/2006, 13:15 So aliens are real? |
| 9. |
Posted by Joel on 12/06/2006, 13:13 That Mars property deed I bought online a couple of years ago doesn't seem so funny now does it... |
| 8. |
Posted by Santa on 12/06/2006, 13:12 That's why you're not a NASA expert :) |
| 7. |
Posted by Brad on 12/06/2006, 13:11 I knew it! War of the worlds here we come. I just hope they haven't figured out that vitamin C combats colds... |
| 6. |
Posted by paul on 12/06/2006, 13:08 good thing we don't need the money being spent gazing at a dead planet on this one. |
| 5. |
Posted by hugo on 12/06/2006, 13:05 Raise SHIELDS!!!! Now!! |
| 4. |
Posted by Ron Tomey on 12/06/2006, 13:04 There is DEFINITELY life on Mars!! |
| 3. |
Posted by Me on 12/06/2006, 13:02 And we thought FIJI water was expensive. Wait till you see the price tag for this stuff! |







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