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Friday, December 14, 2007

Clues from Antarctica aid in search for water on Mars

In recent years, scientists have examined images of several sites on Mars where water appears to have flowed to the surface and left behind a trail of sediment.Those sites closely resemble places where water flows today in the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica, a new study has found. Researchers have used the Dry Valleys as an analogy for Mars for 30 years, explained Berry Lyons, professor of Earth Science a nd director of the Byrd Tolar Research Center at Ohio State University.

 

Notion bolstered

 

Lyons is the lead principal investigator for the Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) Network. The new study bolsters the notion that liquid water could be flowing beneath the surface of Mars.And since bacteria thrive in the liquid water flowing in the Dry Valleys, the find suggests that bacterial life could possibly exist on Mars as well.Scientists have thus gathered more evidence that suggests flowing water on Mars — by comparing images of the red planet to an otherworldly landscape on Earth, according to an Ohio State University press release.One of the LTER sites is in the Dry Valleys, a polar desert in Antarctica with year-round saltwater flowing beneath the surface. With temperatures that dip as low as negative 85 degrees Fahrenheit, it's as cold as the Martian equator, and its iron-rich soil gives it a similar red colour.

 

"If you looked at pictures of both landscapes side by side, you couldn't tell them apart," Lyons said. In the new study, LTER scientists did just that — they compared images of water flows in the Dry Valleys to images of gullies on Mars that show possible evidence of recent water flow.Team member Peter Doran of the University of Illinois at Chicago presented the results Tuesday, at the American Geophysical Union meeting at San Francisco.

 

High salinity

 

The water in the Dry Valleys can be very salty — it's full of calcium chloride, the same kind of salt we sprinkle on roadways to melt ice. That's why the water doesn't freeze.

 

Natural springs form from melted ground ice or buried glacier ice, and the saltwater percolates to the surface."Even in the dead of winter, there are locations with salty water in the Dry Valleys," Lyons said."Two months a year, we even have lakes of liquid water covered in ice." But after the water reaches the surface, it evaporates, leaving behind salt and sediment. The same thing would happen on Mars, he added.

 

Close resemblance

 

Because the suspected sediment sites on Mars closely resemble known sediment sites in the Dry Valleys, Lyons and his colleagues think that liquid saltwater is likely flowing beneath the Martian surface.Lyons, who has led many expeditions to Antarctica, said that his team will continue to compare what they learn on Earth to any new evidence of water uncovered on Mars.As they walk across the Dry Valleys, they can't help but compare the two."There's just something about that landscape, about being so far from civilization, that makes you think about other worlds," he said.The scientists' conclusion: the Martian sites closely resemble sites in the Dry Valleys where water has seeped to the surface

 

The Hindu, December 13th 2007


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