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To: Carolyn who wrote (674)6/21/2000 11:09:00 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 753
 
Water on Mars? Today June 21, 2000

dailynews.netscape.com

Report: Signs of liquid water
discovered on Mars

(CNN)-- Despite its cold and arid
surface, Mars displays signs of water
springs possibly heated by volcanism,
bolstering theories that simple life
forms could have emerged on the red
planet, according to reports.

Looking at images snapped by the
Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft,
researchers have detected evidence of
springs on the surface, USA Today
reported Wednesday. The discovery
focuses on the Valles Marineris
region, a colossal canyon that
dominates the martian landscape.

Scientists think Mars' surface coursed
with water billions of years ago, based
on evidence of liquid erosion and signs
of ancient channels and seas. But the
water all but disappeared as the planet
cooled and its atmosphere thinned.

Water is known to exist in the present as
ice in the northern ice cap and as
vapor in faint clouds. But vast quantities
could remain trapped under the
surface, according to planetary geologists.

Many theorize that such groundwater remains
in a frozen state. But the
Surveyor images suggest that recent
underground volcanic forces have
heated water into a liquid state, according
to a colleague of a Mars scientist
who made the discovery.

"What was known before, there was evidence
of volcanism occurring in the
recent past, say tens of millions of years
ago," said MIT planetary geologist
Maria Zuber.

"This will be better than that," she said,
declining to give specifics. The report
will be published in the June 29 issue of
Science magazine.

Groundwater would likely turn into vapor or
ice soon after it reached the
surface. But the presence of hot springs
could strengthen the theory that life
exists, or once existed, on Mars.

Some unusual forms of microscopic life
flourish near hot springs in the
recesses of the Earth. Similar springs on
Mars might harbor life as well,
some scientists speculate.

"This is incredibly exciting. What this
means is that we have a chance to find
... extant life," Mars Society president
Robert Zubrin said.

NASA officials would not comment on the
report, but the agency plans to
make a major science announcement the day
Science publishes the Mars
paper.

Michael Carr,
an expert on martian
hydrology,
co-authored the report with
fellow U.S.
Geological Survey
scientist
Baerbel Lucchita, who has
researched
Antarctic ice flows and
mapped the
Valles Marineris, said
NASA Watch,
quoting unnamed
NASA sources.

NASA Watch, an
independent Web
site that
monitors the space agency,
first reported
news of the Mars
discovery
earlier this week.

The diverse
terrain of the Valles
Marineris
displays many types of
landforms as
it snakes across Mars
for more than
3,700 miles (6,000 km):
volcanic
deposits, ancient sea
sediment and
windblown rock
avalanches.

The canyon
descends well below the
usual surface
level of Mars. And
scientists
have searched the low
recesses of Mars in the past for signs of
water.

The Surveyor took other photos of deep
craters thought to show evidence of
past water seepage. One 1997 image of the
southern Noachis Terra region
reveals crater wall depressions possibly
left by leaking groundwater,
according to Malin Space Sciences, which
operates the Surveyor camera.

Liquid water on Mars would make
colonization of the planet much easier.
Colonists could convert water into hydrogen
and oxygen, using both as rocket
fuel and the second for breathing gas.



To: Carolyn who wrote (674)6/21/2000 11:10:00 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 753
 
LOL Carolyn.....Wonder just who has time to put some of these sites together???
K~



To: Carolyn who wrote (674)7/12/2000 11:28:15 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 753
 
Here's a really interesting site for the solar flares due the rest of this week:

Futures seem to be up tonight....wonder what kind of combo futures and solar flares will make...hummmmmmmmm

spaceweather.com

and a minor grub all in a row....with 8's too...