Lava, not water, may have carved the biggest channels on Mars.
Ever since NASA's Mariner 9 spacecraft
beamed back the first images of the channels in the 1970s, most people
have assumed they were created by massive floods. But David Leverington
of Texas Tech University in Lubbock says flowing water would have left
behind much more sediment than is seen. There are also few minerals that
form in liquid water present.
Lava, however, is known to have carved
big channels on the moon. And Leverington points out that some of the
channels on Mars start on the flanks of volcanoes and end in large
deposits of solidified lava (Geomorphology, DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2011.05.022).
Kelin Whipple
of Arizona State University (ASU) in Tempe agrees that lava probably
carved the huge channels, such as Kasei Valles (shown). He says the
study calls into question the case for huge volumes of water – and
possibly an ocean – on ancient Mars.
But Phil Christensen, also at ASU, says clays and fans of sediment still point to the existence of smaller Martian lakes and rivers.
These would be better places to search for life, he says, because they
would have held water for longer periods than the giant channels, where
floods – if there ever were any – would have been fleeting. "Lakes and
deltas are probably the places people are going to look for life,"
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