http://slate.msn.com/id/2093779/

Why Is Mars Red?
Basically, the whole planet is rusty.
By Brendan I. Koerner
January 12, 2004

Mars: Bucket o' rust
 
Spirit, NASA's scrappy exploration robot, has been snapping some 
breathtaking photos of Mars. More portraits of red-tinged landscapes 
should emerge shortly, as Spirit ventures forth from its lander. But 
why does every nook and cranny on Mars invariably look red?

The simple explanation is that the planet's soil is rich in iron oxide, 
but there's much debate as to why the mineral is so ubiquitous in the 
Martian environment. The old theory is that the oxidization process began 
early in Mars' life cycle, when warm water flowed on the planet - water that 
may have carved out the long, now-barren channels that snake through portions 
of the planet. Rocks containing iron would have slowly been worn away by 
rivers and seas, and the oxygen in the water would have combined with the 
iron to create iron oxide - or, in lay terms, the iron would have rusted 
into red dust. Flecks of the reddish mineral would then have been dispersed 
all over the planet via raindrops. Scientists who believe that Mars was once 
flooded with water have pointed to the abundance of iron oxide as proof of 
their claims. And where there's water, of course, there may also be life.

But data culled from Pathfinder's visit to Mars in 1997 hints at an 
alternative explanation, championed by Albert Yen of NASA's Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory. Pathfinder found that Mars' soil contained far more iron than 
its rocks, which suggests that at least some of the planet's iron came from 
meteorites - a pretty easy contention to support since Mars' surface is 
pockmarked with impact craters. Yen has gone a step further, however, in 
arguing that water needn't have been present for the meteorite-borne iron 
to be converted into iron oxide. 

In 2000, he conducted an experiment with a 100-milligram chunk of 
labradorite, a mineral commonly found in Martian soil. The sample was placed 
in a test tube filled with gases common to the Martian atmosphere and chilled 
to a Mars-like minus 76 degrees Fahrenheit. Finally, Yen and his cohorts 
pelted the tube with ultraviolet light, to mimic the effects of sunlight. 
(UV light on Mars is particularly harsh since the planet's ozone layer is so 
thin.) After a week, they analyzed the sample for evidence of superoxide ions, 
negatively charged oxygen molecules that are capable of causing iron 
oxidization even when there's no water present. Sure enough, Yen found the 
superoxides as he'd predicted - a blow to the astrobiologists who'd long 
believed that Mars' red hue indicated that water, and perhaps life, must 
have once been abundant on the planet.

The presence of superoxides in the Martian soil would also explain why the 
Viking landers of 1976 found no evidence of organic material on the planet - 
superoxides break down all organic compounds, including those carried on 
meteorites. But they also work extremely slowly, perhaps too slowly to fully 
explain the prevalence of reddish hues on the Red Planet. It's possible that 
Mars' coloration, then, is due to the combined effects of ancient water and 
superoxides.


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