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Evidence for an ancient martian ocean in the topography of deformed shorelines
Guest_AlexBlackwell_*
post Jun 13 2007, 05:04 PM
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Perron et al. have a new paper ("Evidence for an ancient martian ocean in the topography of deformed shorelines") in the June 14, 2007, issue Nature. There is also an accompanying News and Views piece by Maria Zuber. See the Editor's Summary for a synopsis and links.

See also:

Mystery Solved: Mars Had Large Oceans
By Dave Mosher, Space.com
posted: 13 June 2007
01:00 pm ET
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Guest_AlexBlackwell_*
post Jun 13 2007, 05:09 PM
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See also the following EurekAlert releases:

Study supports notion that Mars once had ocean

Mars -- Red Planet once blue planet

New evidence points to oceans on Mars
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djellison
post Jun 13 2007, 05:11 PM
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Dr Parker...take a bow smile.gif


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Guest_AlexBlackwell_*
post Jun 13 2007, 05:32 PM
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I, too, am glad to see the concept of a martian Oceanus Borealis gaining a pulse again. It had taken a battering over the years.
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tglotch
post Jun 13 2007, 05:59 PM
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I don't know...Perron's a really smart guy, but I find the northern ocean hard to buy. I mean, I've stood out in the field in several places that geologists *know* were ancient shorelines, and they're really hard to see! And that is standing right on top of them and looking at aircraft imagery. Its an awful lot harder on Mars, especially when you consider the ~4Gy of deposition and erosion that must have occurred since then.

oops...~2Gy sounds about right..thanks dvandorn...but thats still a lot of time.
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dvandorn
post Jun 13 2007, 08:10 PM
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Well, Tim, I know that they're a lot more recent than 2Gy old (the estimated age of the Martian shorelines, at least according to the article at Space.com), but the shorelines of southwest North America's great inland sea have always been pretty obvious to me when I have flown in to Phoenix from the midwest. I surely don't know any other explanation for the extended wall-like structures that separate higher, slightly hillier terrain from the lower, flatter desert floor.

Granted, those shorelines are much younger, and therefore are also a lot more discernible. But any theory that even approximately accounts for the Martian dichotomy has to be at least seriously considered, IMHO.

I also find the concept of the Tharsis deposition toppling the planet over to be attractive -- if the Tharsis bulge originated well away from the equator, over billions of years the whole planet would tend to shift to place the heaviest portion of the bulge much closer to the equator. I may not be a professional geologist or planetologist, but the theory feels truthful to me...

-the other Doug


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“The trouble ain't that there is too many fools, but that the lightning ain't distributed right.” -Mark Twain
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RichardLeis
post Jun 13 2007, 10:19 PM
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Any suggestions on how to quickly and succinctly explain why this work is more legitimate than the "puddle" paper? To the lay public, both may be equally as legitimate. My quick attempt was "The difference with this latest news is peer review, Nature, multiple well-regarded scientists and commentators, and no obvious and immediate flaws. Still may not be the truth, but the entire approach is different from the claim of puddles. Still exciting. Still must remain skeptical as research continues."
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remcook
post Jun 14 2007, 09:14 AM
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A funny sentence in the 'news and views' bit, related to a discussion in another thread:

"This objection is that a shoreline must follow a line of constant gravitational potential: the 'geoid' on Earth, the 'areoid' on Mars" hmmmmm smile.gif
Interesting stuff this anyway!
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dvandorn
post Jun 14 2007, 01:25 PM
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Yes, any shoreline must follow the "areoid" because of how water collects on a planetary surface. This is a basic element of physics.

However, it is more than obvious that the "areoid" has changed over the past couple of gigayears. The Tharsis bulge was very likely emplaced *after* any such northern ocean had dried up, evaporated and/or been incorporated into underground reservoirs. This impressive pile of volcanics reshaped the very planet -- and rebalanced it, too. For example, the great canyons of Valles Marineris were formed as rifting occurred, due to the reaction of the crust to the immense amount of lava that was poured out onto the Tharsis region. The building of the Tharsis bulge is what likely caused mars to topple on its side, to place a majority of the mass now newly distributed onto the surface as close to the equator as possible.

That kind of activity, occurring over a billion years or more, would naturally crumple the crust up in some places and tear it apart in others. It is no more reasonable to expect that the areoid is the same now as it was when conditions allowed for oceans on Mars than it is to expect that the mountaintops in the Himalayas were always uplifted to the top of Earth's sensible atmosphere. Since there are fossils of seabed creatures in the rocks at the tops of those mountains, we know for a fact that those rocks once lay under an ocean. To say that there cannot be ocean-floor rocks at the top of Himalayas because the geoid doesn't allow it is just as spurious an argument as to claim that shorelines can't exist on Mars along its dichotomy boundary because the current areoid doesn't indicate them.

-the other Doug


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remcook
post Jun 14 2007, 01:46 PM
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I was referring to the naming of the 'areoid' vs. geoid, see: http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.p...3868&st=300
smile.gif
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dvandorn
post Jun 14 2007, 02:04 PM
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Ah, gotcha... wink.gif

Well, it was worthwhile to debunk the "objection" you cited, anyway...

-the other Doug


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“The trouble ain't that there is too many fools, but that the lightning ain't distributed right.” -Mark Twain
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MahFL
post Jun 14 2007, 02:45 PM
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Oceans = fish = land animals.......
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centsworth_II
post Jun 14 2007, 03:12 PM
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QUOTE (MahFL @ Jun 14 2007, 10:45 AM) *
Oceans = fish = land animals.......

There's a whole lot that has to happen
before the fish stage of your scenario.
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centsworth_II
post Jun 14 2007, 03:18 PM
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QUOTE (remcook @ Jun 14 2007, 09:46 AM) *
I was referring to the naming of the 'areoid' vs. geoid...

I'm with Phil Stooke on this (if I understand his position). Geo-, referring to
land, is perfectly -- and simply -- used for descriptions of land and its features,
no matter what planet it is found on.
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Guest_AlexBlackwell_*
post Jun 14 2007, 11:45 PM
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QUOTE (tglotch @ Jun 13 2007, 07:59 AM) *
I don't know...Perron's a really smart guy, but I find the northern ocean hard to buy.

I've closely followed Oceanus Borealis in the literature ever since Tim Parker published his first paper and really thought the data would confirm it. The initial MGS MOLA data (ca. 1998; published in Geophysical Research Letters) looked promising for Contact 2. After that, though, things went downhill. Carr and Head [2003] revived things a bit with a nice paper in JGR-Planets; see "Oceans on Mars: An assessment of the observational evidence and possible fate" (2.2 Mb PDF reprint).

In any event, I read the Perron et al. paper and found it really interesting. It does address one of the major obstacles about the current configuration and long wavelength structure of the putative contacts. Now if someone can write a similarly convincing paper explaining the lack of shoreline features in the hires imagery, then I'll be on the way to becoming a True Believer again.
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