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Old 2010-06-14, 01:52   Link #7794
TinyRedLeaf
Moving in circles
 
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Singapore
Age: 49
A third of Mars once covered by ocean, study shows
Quote:
Paris (June 13): A huge, potentially life-giving sea likely covered more than a third of Mars some 3.5 billion years ago, according to a study released today.

Spread over an area the size of the Atlantic Ocean, it would have straddled the north pole and contained the equivalent of a 10th of the water on Earth.

For decades, scientists have argued whether the Red Planet once harboured bodies of water big enough to help nourish a true hydrological cycle marked by evaporation and rainfall. Recent evidence suggests as much, but doubts remained.

To dig deeper, research associate Gaetano Di Achille and assistant professor Brian Hynek of the University of Colorodo in Boulder sifted through huge stores of images collected by Nasa's Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter in the late 1990s and other more recent European and US satellite-based monitoring systems.

The data was not new, but the researchers were the first to link up all available information on Mars' terrain into a single computer-driven model.

The study, published in Nature Geoscience, found 52 river-delta deposits scattered across the planet. More than half occurred at about the same elevation, and thus probably marked the boundary of the once-massive sea.

All of these would have been connected either directly to the ocean, or to its groundwater table along with several large, adjacent lakes. The scientists calculated that the ancient sea covered 36 per cent of the planet's surface and contained about 124 million cu km (30 million cubic miles) of water.

AFP
Blue Mars doesn't seem so far-fetched now, perhaps.
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