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Floods
on Mars?
by
Stephen Marshak
In the late nineteenth century, the Italian astronomer Giovanni
Schiaparelli published sketches of linear features on Mars, which
he called canali, meaning "channels." In the English press,
these features came to be known as canals and were taken as evidence
of a Martian civilization. Subsequently, astronomers determined that
the canali were simply artifacts of color variations on Mar’s surface,
caused by seasonal winds. While no canals or civilizations exist
on Mars, close-up images of the planet taken by spacecraft in the
last few decades have revealed well-defined braided stream channels.
Astronomers have little doubt that liquid water flowed on the surface
of Mars at time in the past. They speculate that the water formed
when heat from the planet’s interior, caused by volcanic activity,
melted the ice in near-surface permafrost. The water then flooded
across the vegetation-free surface and quickly carved out river channels.
And this all must have happened a long time ago, for meteor craters
pockmark the channels. Nevertheless, the channels retain their fluvial
character because of the lack of erosion on the planet.
Other Feature Articles
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