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Mars' Ocean Existed Billions Of Years Ago, Says Data From ESA Spacecraft Mars Express

Mars Ocean

First Posted: 02/ 7/2012 1:53 pm Updated: 02/ 7/2012 2:15 pm

By: SPACE.com Staff
Published: 02/07/2012 09:21 AM EST on SPACE.com

A European spacecraft orbiting Mars has found more revealing evidence that an ocean may have covered parts of the Red Planet billions of years ago.

The European Space Agency's Mars Express spacecraft detected sediments on Mars' northern plains that are reminiscent of an ocean floor, in a region that has also previously been identified as the site of ancient Martian shorelines, the researchers said.

"We interpret these as sedimentary deposits, maybe ice-rich," study leader Jérémie Mouginot, of the Institut de Planétologie et d'Astrophysique de Grenoble (IPAG) in France and the University of California, Irvine, said in a statement. "It is a strong new indication that there was once an ocean here."

As part of its mission, Mars Express uses a radar instrument, called MARSIS, to probe beneath the Martian surface and search for liquid and solid water in the upper portions of the planet's crust.

The researchers analyzed more than two years of MARSIS data and found that the northern plains of Mars are covered in low-density material that suggests the region may have been an ancient Martian ocean. [Photos: Red Planet Views from Europe's Mars Express]

"MARSIS penetrates deep into the ground, revealing the first 60-80 meters of the planet's subsurface," said Wlodek Kofman, leader of the radar team at IPAG. "Throughout all of this depth, we see the evidence for sedimentary material and ice."

The idea of oceans on ancient Mars is hardly new, and features reminiscent of shorelines have been tentatively identified in images from various spacecraft and missions. Still, the concept remains controversial.

In fact, this new investigation comes on the heels of a separate study that found that Mars may have experienced a "super-drought," making it parched for too long for life to exist on the surface of the planet today.

But, scientists working to document Mars' history have proposed two oceans: one 4 billion years ago when the planet experienced a warmer and wetter period, and one 3 billion years ago when subsurface ice melted after a large impact that created various channels that drained water into areas of lower elevation, the researchers said.

Still, the more recent ocean would have only been a temporary feature on the Martian surface, the researchers said. The water would likely have been frozen or preserved underground again, or turned into vapor and lifted gradually into the atmosphere within a million years or less, Mouginot explained.

"I don't think it could have stayed as an ocean long enough for life to form," Mouginot said in a statement.

The sediments seen by Mars Express are typically low-density grains of material that have been eroded away by water and carried off to their current location. According to the researchers, the MARSIS instrument reveals the sediments to be areas of low radar reflectivity.

In the ongoing search for life on Mars, astrobiologists will likely have to delve deeper into the Martian past, when liquid water may have existed for longer periods on the surface, the scientists said.

Still, these results are some of the best evidence yet that there were once large bodies of liquid water on the surface of Mars, the researchers said. The findings are also further proof that liquid water likely played an important role in the geological history of Mars, and the planet's own evolution.

"Previous Mars Express results about water on Mars came from the study of images and mineralogical data, as well as atmospheric measurements," Olivier Witasse, a Mars Express project scientist at the European Space Agency, said in a statement. "Now we have the view from the subsurface radar. This adds new pieces of information to the puzzle but the question remains: where did all the water go?"

Mars Express was launched in June 2003 and entered orbit around the Red Planet in December 2003. The spacecraft is scheduled to operate until at least the end of 2012.

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Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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By: SPACE.com Staff Published: 02/07/2012 09:21 AM EST on SPACE.com A European spacecraft orbiting Mars has found more revealing evidence that an ocean may have covered parts of the Red Planet b...
By: SPACE.com Staff Published: 02/07/2012 09:21 AM EST on SPACE.com A European spacecraft orbiting Mars has found more revealing evidence that an ocean may have covered parts of the Red Planet b...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProgressivePicon86
A 50th state Progressive.
02:47 PM on 02/11/2012
I would kill to see Mars a billion or so years ago, and then subsequently go to its surface to see the lifeforms in its oceans. I hope we can find something amazing and life changing for humanity in regards to those "Super-Earths" we have been discovering this year; they seem to have an abundant amount of water.
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JShankel
I want my country forward
07:53 PM on 02/09/2012
Check out my article on io9 on this topic: http://io9.com/5868115/how-we-will-terraform-mars
Al Schrader
Some overnight ideas take decades
12:41 PM on 02/09/2012
Mars is not billions of years old. It's still forming. The water and ice on the planets in our solar system got there from space same as the planets themselves. The stuff in space, including water comes from Einstein's formula flipped to mc^2 = E. Or condensed from starlight. Atoms of water are made from star light. Where this really gets interesting is when atoms form solids, like iron for example.
The atoms actually exchange some of the star light back and forth in a constant balance.
This balance creates a tiny force between the iron atoms. If you add more star light (photons) by warming say a bar of iron, this tiny force increases and pushes the iron atoms apart.
An iron bar will actually get longer if you heat it. This is not a theory, I've done it in my lab and you can repeat this yourself......Alfred-
Al Schrader
Some overnight ideas take decades
12:47 PM on 02/09/2012
(Atoms in water Oxygen and Hydrogen).
02:48 AM on 02/09/2012
Always thought it would've been tragic if Mars had evolved life in its early days...then some asteroid struck it and blasted away its atmosphere and turned it into the frozen lifeless desert we see today. The Borealis basin might the the evidence of such an impact. If so, I think it's also a clear warning to Earth. Time to colonise the Solar System and construct detection-and-defense systems for our world.
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JShankel
I want my country forward
07:49 PM on 02/09/2012
Mars lost its atmosphere most likely because volcanism stopped, which shut down geological recycling of volatiles and removed the magnetosphere which exposed the upper atmosphere to stripping from the solar wind.
03:44 PM on 02/08/2012
I actually forsee mankind terraforming mars in the future. Of course, not within any of our lifetimes
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taoistpunk
because the monks wouldn't have me..
10:55 PM on 02/08/2012
i could see putting some small bases there, but why terraform? antartica will always provide much more habitable terrain and you wouldn't have to worry about your kids being cancer ridden and so weak they break like pencils..
11:43 PM on 02/08/2012
Hmmm, colonizing Antarctica never occurred to me. As overpopulation becomes a larger issue in the future, Antarctica might be one possible solution, but not anytime soon. God point though
01:02 AM on 02/09/2012
They tried that in the Val Kilmer movie and it didn't work.
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GrantS
I'm liberal through and through.
02:26 PM on 02/08/2012
Mars: The Thirsty Planet.

Seems to drink up the water quickly. It will be interesting to find if water is underneath a layer of really thick dust or if it evaporated away.
01:42 PM on 02/08/2012
Newt will colonize
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flossophy
Liberalism is not liberal.
02:20 PM on 02/08/2012
If Obama is reelected, China will colonize.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SIMPLICIMUSS
Kampf gegen Dummheit !
02:55 PM on 02/08/2012
if China colonizes, they could call it the "Red Planet "
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JShankel
I want my country forward
07:52 PM on 02/09/2012
You'll let us know when the free market Mars program starts up.  Cuz it seems to me that it's not Obama who keeps nixing all government spending.
04:46 AM on 02/08/2012
If there was no ocean, what would we fear?
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taoistpunk
because the monks wouldn't have me..
10:44 PM on 02/08/2012
?? small lakes??
01:01 AM on 02/09/2012
Isn't, 'The only thing to fear is fear itself' ? If there's no feat there's no humanity.
11:44 PM on 02/07/2012
I sincerely hope mankind will go to Mars within my lifetime.
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taoistpunk
because the monks wouldn't have me..
10:46 PM on 02/08/2012
better start your own travel company..