Earthlike Mars? |
Earthlike Mars? |
Apr 1 2009, 02:28 AM
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Member Group: Members Posts: 233 Joined: 21-April 05 Member No.: 328 |
All, I know this isn't the right place for this post, but I've looked around and can't find an appropriate, current UMSF forum (Doug, perhaps you could give me some guidance on establishing such) -- so here goes: I think a [the] new paradigm for Martian geology is rapidly coalescing, namely, that Mars is very much like the Earth in terms of the preponderance of water -- except that it is all frozen, and covered under a thin layer of dust/regolith! See, for example, this article:
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/news/41995902.html Hence the "seepages" found in crater walls; hence the evidence of catastophic flooding -- the result of volcanism melting huge pockets of ice. And I am going to add my own wrinkle (probably not original): that the differentiation of Mars into a rougher southern hemisphere and smoother northern hemsphere represents something like Earth's Pangea stage, ie, the northern hemisphere is a vast frozen sea covered with a thin layer of ice. |
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Jun 6 2009, 07:40 PM
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#2
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Member Group: Members Posts: 233 Joined: 21-April 05 Member No.: 328 |
And here's something hot off the press from the Imperial College of London which supports the possibility -- no, let's say probability -- of a frozen Oceanus Borealis. The link is as follows:
http://www3.imperial.ac.uk/newsandeventspg...-10-59-30#fni-2 Their thesis is that the Late Heavy Bombardment added huge quantities of water to the surfaces of both Earth and Mars. I quote briefly: "They found that on average, each meteorite was capable of releasing up to 12 percent of its mass as water vapour and 6 percent of its mass as carbon dioxide when entering an atmosphere . . .Using published models of meteoritic impact rates during the LHB, the researchers calculated that 10 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide and 10 billion tonnes of water vapour could have been delivered to the atmospheres of Earth and Mars each year . . . However, researchers say Mars’ good fortune did not last. Unlike Earth, Mars doesn’t have a magnetic field to act as a protective shield from the Sun’s solar wind. As a consequence, Mars was stripped of most of its atmosphere. A reduction in volcanic activity also cooled the planet. This caused its liquid oceans to retreat to the poles where they became ice." |
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Jun 7 2009, 02:25 AM
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#3
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1065 Joined: 17-February 09 Member No.: 4605 |
As Glenwsmith indicated on another thread, Oceanus Borealis is linked to the Meridiana lake/playa hypothesis. Taking another look at some of the features in the north it almost seems time to dust off some of Nick Hoffman 's White Mars observations, but with a view to reconsidering some of these northern outflow features as submarine water flow turbidites rather than Nick's proposed cyroclastic (CO2) cause.
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