Mars is covered in evidence of ancient lakes, rain and snow — but scientists aren’t sure how that’s possible

Mars is covered

Mars is covered in evidence of ancient lakes, rain and snow — but scientists aren’t sure how that’s possible

Though Mars, the Red Planet, is a vast and inhospitable land today, scientists think it once resembled our very own Earth — the Blue Planet, if you will. More specifically, experts say Mars once had a warm, wet climate, and their belief is based on striking geological features on the now-barren world, such as vast valley networks likely carved by flowing water. In fact, a new team of researchers found evidence that Mars may have once had rain — and even snow.

However, there’s an important mystery buried in the story: It’s unclear where Mars‘ water could have come from, and most climate models predict the world exhibits surface temperatures that are far too cold to sustain liquid water, raising questions about how those visible geological features could have formed.

“It’s very hard to make any kind of conclusive statement,” Amanda Steckel, a postdoctoral researcher at the California Institute of Technology’s Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, said in a statement. “But we see these valleys beginning at a large range of elevations. It’s hard to explain that with just ice.”

Using computer simulations, Steckel and her team dove into what Mars might have looked like about 4 billion years ago during the Noachian epoch, a time when water may have dramatically shaped the planet’s surface. Their model, which was actually originally designed for Earth, was adapted to simulate how Mars’ landscape evolved near the equator. In this region, sprawling channel networks stretch from the highlands and drain into ancient lakes — possibly even an ocean. NASA’s Perseverance rover is currently exploring one of these sites, Jezero Crater, where a powerful river once poured into the basin.

“You’d need meters deep of flowing water to deposit those kinds of boulders [seen in Jezero],” said Brian Hynek, senior author of the study and a scientist at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado, Boulder.

Furthermore, what’s interesting is that hints about Mars’ temperate past are also seen in the geological features on Earth. “You could pull up Google Earth images of places like Utah, zoom out, and you’d see the similarities to Mars,” said Steckel.

The team tested two main ideas for how Mars’ valleys might have formed through precipitation: one where the planet was warm and wet, and another where ice melted temporarily at the edge of a large ice cap — representing a cold, dry climate.

Source: https://www.space.com

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