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VA3SED > NASA     27.06.00 18:14l 161 Lines 6959 Bytes #-8907 (0) @ AMSAT
BID : 33230_VA3SED
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Subj: LIQUID WATER ON MARS
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Sent: 000623/1132Z @:VA3SED.#SWON.ON.CAN.NA #:33230 [Baden] FBB7.00g
From: VA3SED@VA3SED.#SWON.ON.CAN.NA
To  : NASA@CANADA


Donald Savage
Headquarters, Washington, DC                  June 22, 2000
(Phone:  202/358-1727)

Mary Hardin
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA 
(Phone:  818/354-5011)

RELEASE:  00-99

NEW IMAGES SUGGEST PRESENT-DAY 
SOURCES OF LIQUID WATER ON MARS

     In what could turn out to be a landmark discovery in the 
history of Mars exploration, imaging scientists using data from 
NASA's Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft have recently observed 
features that suggest there may be current sources of liquid water 
at or near the surface of the red planet.  

     The new images show the smallest features ever observed from 
martian orbit -- the size of an SUV.  NASA scientists compare the 
features to those left by flash floods on Earth.

     "We see features that look like gullies formed by flowing 
water and the deposits of soil and rocks transported by these 
flows. The features appear to be so young that they might be 
forming today. We think we are seeing evidence of a ground water 
supply, similar to an aquifer," said Dr. Michael Malin, principal 
investigator for the Mars Orbiter Camera on the Mars Global 
Surveyor spacecraft at Malin Space Science Systems (MSSS), San 
Diego, CA.  "These are new landforms that have never been seen 
before on Mars."  

     The findings will be published in the June 30 issue of 
Science magazine.

     "Twenty-eight years ago the Mariner 9 spacecraft found 
evidence -- in the form of channels and valleys -- that billions 
of years ago the planet had water flowing across its surface," 
said Dr. Ken Edgett, staff scientist at MSSS and co-author of the 
paper in Science. "Ever since that time, Mars science has focused 
on the question, 'Where did the water go?' The new pictures from 
Global Surveyor tell us part of the answer -- some of that water 
went under ground, and quite possibly it's still there."

     "For two decades scientists have debated whether liquid water 
might have existed on the surface of Mars just a few billion years 
ago," said Dr. Ed Weiler, Associate Administrator for Space 
Science, NASA Headquarters.  "With today's discovery, we're no 
longer talking about a distant time. The debate has moved to 
present-day Mars.  The presence of liquid water on Mars has 
profound implications for the question of life not only in the 
past, but perhaps even today.  If life ever did develop there, and 
if it survives to the present time, then these landforms would be 
great places to look."

     The gullies observed in the images are on cliffs -- usually 
in crater or valley walls -- and are made up of a deep channel 
with a collapsed region at its upper end (an "alcove") and at the 
other end an area of accumulated debris (an "apron") that appears 
to have been transported down the slope.  Relative to the rest of 
the martian surface, the gullies appear to be extremely young, 
meaning they may have formed in the recent past. 

     "They could be a few million years old, but we cannot rule 
out that some of them are so recent as to have formed yesterday," 
Malin said. 

     Because the atmospheric pressure at the surface of Mars is 
about 100 times less than it is at sea level on Earth, liquid 
water would immediately begin to boil when exposed at the martian 
surface.  Investigators believe that this boiling would be violent 
and explosive.  So how can these gullies form?  Malin explained 
that the process must involve repeated outbursts of water and 
debris, similar to flash floods on Earth.

     "We've come up with a model to explain these features and why 
the water would flow down the gullies instead of just boiling off 
the surface.  When water evaporates it cools the ground -- that 
would cause the water behind the initial seepage site to freeze. 
This would result in pressure building up behind an 'ice dam.'  
Ultimately, the dam would break and send a flood down the gully," 
said Edgett.   

     The occurrence of gullies is quite rare: only a few hundred 
locations have been seen in the many tens of thousands of places 
surveyed by the orbiter camera.  Most are in the martian southern 
hemisphere, but a few are in the north.

      "What is odd about these gullies is that they occur where 
you might not expect them -- in some of the coldest places on the 
planet," Malin indicated.  "Nearly all occur between latitudes 30 degrees 
and 70 degrees, and usually on slopes that get the least amount of 
sunlight during each martian day."  

     If these gullies were on Earth they would be at latitudes 
roughly between New Orleans, Louisiana, and Point Barrow, Alaska, 
in the northern hemisphere; and Sydney, Australia, to much of the 
Antarctic coast in the south.  

     The water supply is believed to be about 100 to 400 meters 
(300 to 1300 feet) below the surface, and limited to specific 
regions across the planet.  Each flow that came down each gully 
may have had a volume of water of, roughly, 2500 cubic meters 
(about 90,000 cubic feet) -- about enough water to sustain 100 
average households for a month or fill seven community-sized 
swimming pools. The process that starts the water flowing remains 
a mystery, but the team believes it is not the result of volcanic 
heating.   

     "I think one of the most interesting and significant aspects 
of this discovery is what it could mean if human explorers ever go 
to Mars," said Malin.  "If water is available in substantial 
volumes in areas other than the poles, it would make it easier for 
human crews to access and use it -- for drinking, to create 
breathable air, and to extract oxygen and hydrogen for rocket fuel 
or to be stored for use in portable energy sources."

     "This latest discovery by the Mars Global Surveyor is a true 
'watershed'--that is, a revolution that pushes the history of 
water on Mars into the present," said Dr. Jim Garvin, Mars Program 
Scientist, NASA Headquarters.  "To follow up on this discovery we 
will continue the search with Mars Global Surveyor and its rich 
array of remote sensing instruments, and in 2001, NASA will launch 
a scientific orbiter with a high spatial resolution middle-
infrared imaging system that will examine the seepage sites in 
search of evidence of water-related minerals.  

     "Furthermore, NASA is in the process of evaluating two 
options for a 2003 mission to Mars, both of which could provide 
independent information concerning the remarkable sites identified 
by Malin and Edgett."

     JPL manages the Mars Global Surveyor Mission for NASA's 
Office of Space Science, Washington, DC.  Malin Space Science 
Systems built and operates the camera system.  JPL is a division 
of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA.

     JPL's industrial partner is Lockheed Martin Astronautics, 
Denver, CO, which developed and operates the spacecraft.

                              - end -

73, de Tedd











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