More evidence of water on Mars0
- From Around the Web, Space
- September 20, 2017
New Geological Society of America Bulletin paper
New Geological Society of America Bulletin paper
Dust to dust. The mysterious dark flows on Mars may not be water after all. Instead, they could be rivulets of sand, set in motion by sunlight on the Martian surface. The dark streaks form on Mars’s slopes during warm seasons, and are known as recurring slope lineae. While there is no direct evidence of
MARS has a real water shortage. It seems we have either misunderstood what its early years were like – or vast amounts of water are hiding beneath its surface.
Puzzles persist about possible water at seasonally dark streaks on Martian slopes, according to a new study of thousands of such features in the Red Planet’s largest canyon system.
NASA is debating to see if they can use the Rovers they have on Mars to find any evidence of liquid water on Mars.