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New observations by a NASA spacecraft orbiting Mars show a planet rich in
water, but suggests that for billions of years it has done little other than
remain frozen in the soil. The finding challenges theories that Mars was
once a warm, wet place hospitable to life.
Instead, the current Martian surface - a cold, dusty and overwhelmingly dry
place - may have been the norm for much of the planet's history, scientists
said Sunday during a briefing at the fall meeting of the American
Geophysical Union.

``Mars may have water, but it's cold,'' said Philip Christensen, of Arizona
State University, Tempe. ``It's there, but it can't do much.''

Since NASA's 2001 Mars Odyssey satellite arrived in orbit around the planet
more than a year ago, it has turned up evidence that there is lots of ice
mixed in its soil, buried as little as 18 inches from the surface, said
William Boynton, of the University of Arizona, Tucson.

Spread across the planet, the amount of water is not huge by Earth
standards - it's the equivalent of about two Lake Michigans. In places,
however, ice makes up 70 percent of the soil by volume, a significant
concentration.

``It's a lot of ice,'' Boynton said.

Previously, scientists speculated that large amounts of water once moved
about Mars, falling as precipitation to the surface, where it flowed in
rivers and streams to pool in lakes, perhaps even oceans.

Odyssey and the Global Surveyor have been remotely prospecting for the
telltale traces of minerals that might have formed in such environments.

Surveyor has found significant deposits of one such mineral, called
hematite, at a location NASA may visit next year with a pair of rovers it
intends to launch.

But Odyssey has yet to find other such minerals and has turned up minerals
present in volcanic rocks that, on Earth at least, are quickly weathered by
water. That suggests the water on Mars has largely stayed put.

Even if it did flow on the surface of Mars, carving the river channels
visible to this day, it probably only did so for brief periods of time,
Christensen said.

Scientists allow that life may have gained a toehold below the surface of
Mars, in spots warm enough to melt the ice that peppers its soil.



xponent

But Not A Drop To Drink Maru

rob


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