Mars looks dead, but don't count it out just yet

TwitterFacebook

Mars' surface is a lifeless, unwelcoming desert. But beneath its red soil the planet still might be alive — geologically.

Big space news broke in 2018: Using a ground-penetrating radar aboard a Mars satellite, a group of scientists detected a thin 12-mile lake thousands of feet beneath the Martian south pole. Now, researchers have put forward a paper arguing that if there is indeed a sizable briny-lake underneath this ice cap, hot molten rock (magma) must have oozed up near the surface and melted the ice. 

Such underground volcanism would have happened in geologically recent time, perhaps a few hundred thousand years ago, or less.  Read more...

More about Space, Science, Mars, Geology, and Volcanoes


COntributer : Mashable http://bit.ly/2GtaSnN

Mars looks dead, but don't count it out just yet Mars looks dead, but don't count it out just yet Reviewed by mimisabreena on Saturday, February 16, 2019 Rating: 5

No comments:

Sponsor

Powered by Blogger.