Gullies Mark Most Recent Water Flow on Mars

Gullies Mark Most Recent Water Flow on Mars
The gully system in the Promethei Terra region of Mars appears to have been carved by melt water and may be the most recent period when water was active on the planet. (Image credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)

Water ispresent on Mars today, but it is entirely bound up in ice because the surfaceis too cold for liquid water.

Butevidence has been mounting that shows water once flowed across the Martiansurface, potentially supporting life. While water does not mean there was life,it's a key prerequisite.

Butthroughout the more than 4 billion-year history of our neighbor, its climatehas cycledback and forth between warmer and cooler periods as the planet wobbled onits axis. Like Earth, Mars' axis is tilted with respect to its orbital planeand the degree of tilt changes over thousands of years. But Mars' tilt changesmore over time, alternately heating up or cooling down parts of the planet asthe amount of sunlight falling on them changes.

"Wethink there was recent water on Mars," said study team member Jim Head of Brown University in Providence, R.I. "This is a big step in the direction to provingthat."

"Younever end up with a pond that you can put goldfish in," said study teammember Samuel Schon, a graduate student at Brown. "You had ice thattypically sublimates. But in these instances, it melted, transported, anddeposited sediment in the fan. It didn't last long, but it happened."

The teamalso determined that ice and snow deposits formed in the alcoves when Mars wastilted so that it plunged into an ice age and ice could form in themid-latitude areas, instead of being confined to the poles, as it is today.About half a million years ago, the planet's tilt change and the ice began tomelt or sublimate.

Schon saidthat other explanations for the water's presence in the gully were ruled out:Groundwater bubbling up seemed unlikely to have occurred multiple times, anddry mass wasting (for example, a rockslide) also didn't seem to fit thepattern.

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Andrea Thompson
Contributor

Andrea Thompson is an associate editor at Scientific American, where she covers sustainability, energy and the environment. Prior to that, she was a senior writer covering climate science at Climate Central and a reporter and editor at Live Science, where she primarily covered Earth science and the environment. She holds a graduate degree in science health and environmental reporting from New York University, as well as a bachelor of science and and masters of science in atmospheric chemistry from the Georgia Institute of Technology.