Difference between revisions of "Rivers on Mars"

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File:Labeled meander showing early and later channels ESP 59515 2160.jpg|Meander with parts labeled  Features like this show that water stayed around for a while. Meanmders start with small loops that get progressively larger.
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File:6438 2155meander.jpg|Meander with cutoff  This image was named HiRISE picture of the day.
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File:34189 1740cutoff.jpg|Cutoff from a meander.  This type of formations takes a long time to form.
 
File:34189 1740cutoff.jpg|Cutoff from a meander.  This type of formations takes a long time to form.
 
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Latest revision as of 09:42, 29 December 2023

Mars topography (MOLA dataset) HiRes (1).jpg

Article written by Jim Secosky. Jim is a retired science teacher who has used the Hubble Space Telescope, the Mars Global Surveyor, and HiRISE.


Nirgal Vallis, as seen by Mariner 9 This is one of the first images to show evidence of past water on Mars.

There is much evidence that water once flowed in river valleys on Mars. Images of curved and branched channels have been seen in images from Mars spacecraft dating back to the early seventies with the Mariner 9 orbiter. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] These river valleys are called Vallis (plural Valles), the Latin word for valley.

Outflow Channels

Water poured out of the ground here at Ravi Vallis and carved a channel.


Researchers have grouped Martian river valleys into two groups. One type, called outflow channels, carried as much as or more water any on Earth and maybe at any time in Earth’s history.[7] Rushing water formed large streamlined islands. Vast quantities of water seem to have just burst out of the ground.[8] [9] [10] [11] [12] The water originated in areas of collapsed terrain where the ground ended up formed into mesas and large blocks. This collapsed terrain has been called chaos.[13] The water is thought to have flowed to lower elevations and created an ocean to the north that may have been one third the area of Mars.[14] [15] Some researches postulated that floods erupted from the ground many times.[16] [17] Since Mars is very cold, ice would have quickly formed on the top and allowed the water to move along for some time. Scientists generally agree that Mars has a thick shell of ice under the surface.[18] Perhaps in the past there was a vast interconnected layer of water under it. If an asteroid, fault, or volcanic eruption caused the ice to break, water could pour out. [19] [20] [21]


Streamlined shapes from around Mars. Great floods of water formed these. Water burst out of the ground.

Streamlined shapes from around Mars. Great floods of water formed these. Water burst out of the ground.

Valley Networks

Another type of channel exists mostly in the old, southern highlands. They were discovered by Mariner 9 in 1971. Sometimes called valley networks, these channels closely resemble streams in drainage basins on the Earth. These channels can be loosely divided into two subtypes: long, winding valleys with few tributaries, and smaller valley networks, often with complex, multiply-branched patterns of tributaries (dendritic).[22]

However, branches are typically shorter on Mars than on the Earth. [23] Also, most channels do not exhibit a high branching density. But, in some places the stream branches are, in fact, as dense as some on Earth.[24] Many look as if they were made with precipitation. Further support for abundant water flow, came from a research team that developed a computer program to look for valleys made by streams found that the stream networks were much longer than previous thought (2.3 times longer) and that they were much denser. Valleys were especially dense in northern Terra Cimmeria and the Margaritifer Terra. There results suggest that precipitation may have caused them.[25] [26] [27]

Warrego Valles system as seen by the Thermal Emission Imaging System on the Mars Odyssey spacecraft

Warrego Valles system as seen by the Thermal Emission Imaging System on the Mars Odyssey spacecraft This system shows the dendritic pattern, multiply-branched patterns of tributaries. This image is one of the first to show this type of system.

Channels displaying curves, wide meanders, oxbow lakes, and wide meanders are similar to those on Earth. Many channels end in low areas such as craters. At times, deltas form where the stream enters a crater; they look like a stream entering a lake. Some small streams are found on valley floors. Stream channels on valley floors imply more than one episode of flow.[28] [29]



Even though some channels go for relative short distances, some may run for hundreds or thousands of kilometers. One long system of lakes and rivers may reach from the far south to the far north. [30] [31] [32] In a study released in 2018, researchers found 34 palelakes and associated channels in the northeastern Hellas Basin. Because some were close to the Hadriacus volcano, some channels may have been created by hydrothermal systems; thereby allowing ice to melt. A number look as if they were formed from precipitation, others from groundwater.[33] [34] [35]

Variety of channels from around Mars

                          Variety of channels from around Mars

Streams in craters

Streams have been found in craters. Some developed from glaciers. Snow accumulated on crater walls and formed glaciers when snow became deep enough. When water melted at the bottom, it flowed onto the crater floor. We see evidence of this with inverted channels. Inverted channels are made when hard materials pile up in the streams. Later erosion, often by the wind, will remove the surrounding, softer material and leave behind elevated ridges where the streams were.[36] [37]

Gale crater may have contained many streams or rivers. The Curiosity rover found features that have been linked to past streams. They have been called benches and noses. The "noses" stick out like noses. Computer simulations show that these shapes can be produced by rivers.[38] [39] [40]

Was Mars too cold for running water?

It seems that these valley networks happened in the past when Mars was much warmer and wetter. But, climate models all say that Mars was always too cold to have much liquid water. The sun is too far away. It likely did not give off as much light energy in the past.[41] [42] [43] Another factor that could still have made the climate warmer is that the atmosphere may have been much thicker in the past and could have contained greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide. However, if this were the case, carbon dioxide would have ended up in large deposits of carbonate rocks such as limestone.[44] Despite looking with instruments designed to detect carbonates, scientists have found very little. [45] They do exist in tiny areas, have been found in meteorites that came from Mars, and have been found by landers, but there just does not seem to be enough to say that Mars once had a thick carbon dioxide atmosphere. [46] [47] [48] [49] [50] Some researchers have proposed that other greenhouse gases may have been involved.[51] [52] So we are left with what appears to be certain proof that Mars had great amounts of liquid water—somehow channels were made. On the other hand, we do not know how the climate could have ever supported very much liquid water.[53] Nevertheless, scientists have suggested many ways for channels to be created. We must keep in mind that the planet does not have to that warmed to 32 degrees F for running water to exist because water on Mars would likely contain dissolved minerals that would lower its freezing point.[54] Also, water may have collected in vast aquifers under the ground and released at different times by things such as heating from magma moving underground or by impacts of asteroids. After large impacts, the nearby area might be warm enough, long enough for water to erode channels.[55] [56] [57] [58] [59] [60] [61] [62] It has even been suggested that the weather after a big impact may be changed enough to generate rainfall.[63] [64] [65] Some researchers think that streams may have existed under thick ice sheets. [66] [67] [68] [69] [70] [71] As of today, we just do not have a definite answer.

References

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See Also

External links

  • Head, J., et al. 2023. GEOLOGICAL AND CLIMATE HISTORY OF MARS: IDENTIFICATION OF POTENTIAL WARM AND

WET CLIMATE ‘FALSE POSITIVES’. 54th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference 2023 (LPI Contrib. No. 2806). 1731.pdf