NASA
images suggest liquid water present on Mars
By
Will Dunham Wed Dec 6, 5:00 PM ET
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - Striking images taken by NASA's Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft suggest
the presence of liquid water on the Martian surface, a tantalizing find for scientists
wondering if the Red Planet might harbor life.
The
orbiting U.S. spacecraft enabled scientists to detect changes in the walls of
two craters in the southern hemisphere of Mars apparently caused by the downhill
flow of water in the past few years, a team of scientists announced on Wednesday.
Scientists
long have wondered whether life ever existed on Mars. Liquid water is an important
part of the equation. On Earth, all forms of life require water to survive. Scientists
previously established the existence of water on Mars in the form of ice at the
poles and water vapor, and pointed to geological features that appear to have
been carved by water ages ago.
Kenneth
Edgett of Malin Space Science Systems in San Diego, a scientist involved in the
research, said there had been a quest for "smoking gun" evidence for
liquid water currently on Mars.
"Basically,
this is the 'squirting gun' for water on Mars," Edgett told reporters.
The
scientists, whose research appears in the journal Science, compared images of
the Martian surface taken seven years apart and also found 20 newly formed craters
left by impacts from space debris.
They
said water seemed to have flowed down two gullies in the past few years, even
though liquid water cannot remain long on the planet's frigid, nearly airless
surface because it would rapidly freeze or evaporate.
That
seemed to support the notion that underground liquid water may reside close enough
to the surface in some places that it can seep out periodically.
The
images did not directly show water. But they showed bright deposits running several
hundred yards (meters) seemingly left by material carried downhill inside the
crater by running water, occasionally snaking around obstacles and leaving finger-shaped
marks diverting from the main flow.
'SWIMMING
POOLS'
"It
could be acidic water, it could be briny water, it could be water carrying all
kinds of sediment, it could be slushy, but H2O is involved," Edgett said.
Edgett
said each apparent flow was caused by an amount equal to "five to 10 swimming
pools of water."
Michael
Meyer, lead scientist for NASA's Mars Exploration Program, said the observations
provided the strongest evidence to date that water still flowed occasionally on
the surface of Mars. "The big questions are: how does this happen, and does
it point to a habitat for life?" Meyer said.
Among
the planets in our solar system, only Earth has a more hospitable climate, and
some scientists suspect Mars once sheltered primitive, bacteria-like organisms.
Previous missions found evidence Mars at one time boasted ample quantities of
water.
The
scientists conceded the images were only circumstantial evidence not proof. They
cited a possible alternative explanation that those features were caused by the
movement of dry dust down a slope.
The
researchers said their findings raised many questions, including the source and
abundance of the water and whether it could serve as a resource in future missions
to explore Mars.
The
researchers reported finding those gullies in 2000, but this was the first time
they revealed the presence of newly deposited material seemingly carried by liquid
water.
Last
month, NASA said it had lost contact with the Mars Global Surveyor after a decade-long
mission in which it mapped the surface of Mars, tracked its climate and searched
for evidence of water.