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A Closer Look at Water-Related Geologic Activity on Mars

Authors :
K. J. Kolb
Eric M. Eliason
Steven W. Squyres
Candice Hansen
J. L. Griffes
Scott L. Murchie
James J. Wray
Bradley J. Thomson
Lajos Keszthelyi
Patrick Russell
Michael T. Mellon
Shane Byrne
Frank C. Chuang
Nicolas Thomas
Kathryn E. Fishbaugh
Alexandra K. Davatzes
R. L. Kirk
Frank P. Seelos
Kimberly D. Seelos
M. P. Milazzo
Nathan T. Bridges
Kenneth E. Herkenhoff
Alfred S. McEwen
Catherine M. Weitz
John A. Grant
Virginia C. Gulick
Chris H. Okubo
Livio L. Tornabene
Maria E. Banks
Colin M. Dundas
Sara Martínez-Alonso
Windy L. Jaeger
W. A. Delamere
Source :
Science. 317:1706-1709
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2007.

Abstract

Water has supposedly marked the surface of Mars and produced characteristic landforms. To understand the history of water on Mars, we take a close look at key locations with the High-Resolution Imaging Science Experiment on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, reaching fine spatial scales of 25 to 32 centimeters per pixel. Boulders ranging up to approximately 2 meters in diameter are ubiquitous in the middle to high latitudes, which include deposits previously interpreted as finegrained ocean sediments or dusty snow. Bright gully deposits identify six locations with very recent activity, but these lie on steep (20 degrees to 35 degrees) slopes where dry mass wasting could occur. Thus, we cannot confirm the reality of ancient oceans or water in active gullies but do see evidence of fluvial modification of geologically recent mid-latitude gullies and equatorial impact craters.

Details

ISSN :
10959203 and 00368075
Volume :
317
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f3107f7cec55230c401fbf44f646066d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1143987