MARSDAILY
Site of Martian lakes linked to ancient habitable environment
by Staff Writers
Tucson AZ (SPX) Feb 10, 2016


Perspective views of (top) the floor of a basin where Rodriguez and others propose in this investigation that shallow lakes could have formed within the last few tens of millions of years, and (below) the floor of a proposed Martian analog high mountain lake in the Tibetan plateau, where Rodriguez will conduct a field investigation this coming summer. The arrows in both panels identify similar ridges that surround the basin's floor. In the Tibetan lake case, the ridges are thought to form as sediments are pushed outwards by the freezing waters. These types of ridges might be diagnostic shoreline feature of lakes that formed under extremely cold and dry Martian conditions. A key objective of the planned field expedition is to investigate these bizarre shoreline features and characterize their astrobiological potential. For a larger version of this image please go here.

Groundwater circulation beneath a massive tectonic rift zone located along the flanks of some the solar system's largest volcanic plateaus resulted in the formation more than 3 billion years ago of some the deepest basins on Mars, according to a new paper by Planetary Science Institute Senior Scientist J. Alexis Palmero Rodriguez.

These basins could have been episodically covered, perhaps during hundreds of millions of years, by lava and water lakes that were discharged from subsurface pressurized sources, Rodriguez writes in "Groundwater Flow Induced Collapse and Flooding in Noctis Labyrinthus, Mars" that appears in Planetary and Space Science.

This shows an area on Mars that could possibly have harbored life.

"The temperature ranges, presence of liquid water, and nutrient availability, which characterize known habitable environments on Earth, have higher chances of forming on Mars in areas of long-lived water and volcanic processes," Rodriguez said.

"Existing salt deposits and sedimentary structures of possible emplacement within Martian paleo-lakes are of particular astrobiological importance when looking for past habitable areas on Mars.

"This is particularly true if the discharge of early Mars groundwater, perhaps liked to hydrothermal systems that were active for billions of years, contributed to the formation of the paleo-lakes, as it is proposed in this investigation."

The detection of paleo-lake sites on Mars is particular challenging because under the planet's frigidly cold and thin atmosphere, their ponded water would have behaved differently than on Earth, he said. "In this research we propose a Tibetan region where high mountain lakes show unique sets of landforms that might explain some basin interior features in the studied region of Mars."

In collaboration with the Chinese government, Rodriquez will visit the Tibetan region this coming summer to investigate their in-situ potential as astrobiological analog sites. These activities will not be funded by NASA.

"Groundwater Flow Induced Collapse and Flooding in Noctis Labyrinthus, Mars," J. Alexis Palmero Rodriguez et al., 2016, Planetary and Space Science. PSI Senior Scientist Cathy Weitz and Associate Research Scientist Thomas Platz are co-authors on the paper.

.


Related Links
Planetary Science Institute
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

Previous Report
MARSDAILY
Rock samples from Western US teach how to hunt for life on Mars
Lawrence KS (SPX) Oct 02, 201
The search for life beyond Earth is one of the grandest endeavors in the history of humankind - a quest that could transform our understanding of our universe both scientifically and spiritually. With news coming this week that NASA has confirmed the presence of flowing saltwater on the surface of Mars, the hunt for life on the Red Planet has new momentum. "One of the many reasons this is ... read more


MARSDAILY
US missile shield spotlights divisions on handling N. Korea

S. Korea, US to discuss deployment of US missile system

Next-Gen S-500 Offers 'World-Beating' Features to Guard Russia's Skies

S. Korea, US to discuss deployment of US missile system

MARSDAILY
Saudi intercepts Scud from Yemen

Chronology of North Korean missile development

Finnish defense minister approves rocket procurement

SM-6 missile demonstrates capabilities

MARSDAILY
Moscow Slams Washington Over Development of 'Prompt Global Strike' System

Turkish Aerospace Industries UAV Anka makes debut flight

US drone strike kills top Qaeda chief in south Yemen: family

Israeli, South Korean firms forming JV for UAV production

MARSDAILY
ViaSat tapped to provide tactical terminals for Apache helicopters

Harris wins place on military communications contract

General Dynamics MUOS-Manpack radio supports government testing of MUOS network

Raytheon to produce, test Navy Multiband Terminals

MARSDAILY
Taser's effect on cognition may undermine police questioning

Philippines officially marks receipt of U.S. armored vehicles

Telephonics to support electronic countermeasures for US Marines

Elbit Systems reveals Seagull unmanned surface vehicle

MARSDAILY
Russia proposes licensed production of T-90S tanks in Iran

CACI completes acquisition of L-3 NSS Inc.

PZL challenges Polish MOD contract decision

Engility continues DOD classified engineering, intel support

MARSDAILY
Pope says he angered Merkel with comments on Europe

Bulgaria authorises NATO to protect its airspace

$66M set aside by U.S. for military facilities in Philippines

Russia green groups forced to close over 'foreign agents' tag

MARSDAILY
Nanoscale cavity strongly links quantum particles

New type of nanowires, built with natural gas heating

Nanosheet growth technique could revolutionize nanomaterial production

New record in nanoelectronics at ultralow temperatures