BBC: Mars 'not a watery world' 27
Scoria writes "Contrary to a belief shared among many scientists, new evidence established by NASA's Mars Global Surveyor suggests that the planet may not have once possessed a temperate climate capable of sustaining life. Instead, an absence of carbonate rock deposits, which require the presence of liquid water to be produced, lends credence to those who believe that Mars is perpetually frozen."
Grrr... (Score:5, Informative)
Anyhow, JPL sent out a press release yesterday: New Findings Could Dash Hopes for Past Oceans on Mars [nasa.gov]
Re:Grrr... (Score:3, Insightful)
Bugger that. I hope for future oceans on Mars.
Re:Grrr... (Score:2)
Re:Grrr... (Score:3, Insightful)
These objects are not stuck inside any gravity well, and with appropriate gravity assists an enormous amount of water could be sent on its way by using very little "delta-vee".
Five years ago, when 1996TL66 -a hundred-kilometer object- was discovere
Is this just one group stating their opinion? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's such a shallow article it's hard to tell if this is significant. It makes me think of someone saying over and over and over again that there's absolutely no evidence to suggest x. When someone comes up with some evidence that does suggest x, the naysayer quickly fires back, "Well, that's only a little bit of evidence, so it's still not true." Maybe, maybe not.
I agree with the NASA guy. It's too early to tell.
Alex.
Re:Is this just one group stating their opinion? (Score:5, Informative)
This means either that Mars didn't have large seas, or that any carbonates that did form were in basins that have since been covered up, and hence weren't detectable by this mission.
Another article here [newscientist.com]
Re:Is this just one group stating their opinion? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Is this just one group stating their opinion? (Score:2)
Chernobyl II? (Score:4, Funny)
Now Russia won't have to worry about those silly control rods to help keep the reactor cooler in their proposed Mars Nuclear Station [bbc.co.uk]!
in other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:in other news... (Score:1, Funny)
Carbonate precipitation (Score:5, Informative)
Carbonates can also precipitate unassisted. A dramatic example is the somewhat speculative theory known as the snowball Earth. For periods of 10 million years and repeating perhaps up to 4 times starting 3/4 and ending 1/2 a billion years ago, the Earth froze. Large glaciers covered the land and the oceans were capped by a kilometer of ice. Without getting into a heated discussion about how this occurred, the escape sequence is the interesting part. Volacanoes poke their way through the ice and vent CO2 into the atmosphere. Since there was no biological activity, the CO2 kept building up until the greenhouse effect can melt the ice. The newly liquid oceans then absorbed CO2 from the extremely high concentrations in the atmosphere, and then rapid carbonate precipitation commenced, leaving, in some cases, crystal clusters as tall as a person.
doesn't seem to us much (Score:4, Informative)
Re:doesn't seem to us much (Score:4, Informative)
CO2 + H2O + CaCO3 => Ca2+ + 2*HCO3-
The reaction will be driven to the left by the removal of CO2. from the water. As your flat Mountain Dew can attest, depressurizing and warming a liquid is a good way to get rid of CO2. Carbonate thus precipitates in warm shallow water. We would expect "bathtub rings" of carbonate around ocean basins. These would be less likely to be covered, but even if they were, erosional products from them would still get mixed into the soil and be visible in from space. Only a small amount of magnesite (magnesium carbonates being virtually impossible to precipitate from water, at least when calcium is around) was found, suggesting problems with the idea of oceans.
Venus is more interesting anyway... (Score:2)
Oh, and it's not cold at all, especially on the sunny side.
Re:Venus is more interesting anyway... (Score:2)
That's not an advantage, that's a disadvantage. Cold is much easier to deal with then hot. Reasons why left as an exercise to the reader.
Water? (Score:2, Insightful)
If I hear this much more, I'm going to scream. (Score:2)
Ok. People watch too much Star Trek. On the other hand, this is Slashdot.
The reason life is grounded around water and carbon have to do with the very special chemical properties of water - a few being it's less dense solid than liquid, and it dissolves almost everything - and the fact carbo