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University of Colorado team finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Mars PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Everything Science   
Jun 17, 2009 at 12:00 AM

A University of Colorado at Boulder research team has discovered the first definitive evidence of shorelines on Mars, an indication of a deep, ancient lake there and a finding with implications for the discovery of past life on the Red Planet.
 

 
earth
This is reconstructed landscape showing the Shalbatana lake on Mars as it may have looked roughly 3.4 billion years ago. Data used in reconstruction are from NASA and the European Space Agency.

Image credit: G. Di Achille, University of Colorado

Estimated to be more than 3 billion years old, the lake appears to have covered as much as 80 square miles and was up to 1,500 feet deep -- roughly the equivalent of Lake Champlain bordering the United States and Canada, said CU-Boulder Research Associate Gaetano Di Achille, who led the study. The shoreline evidence, found along a broad delta, included a series of alternating ridges and troughs thought to be surviving remnants of beach deposits.

"This is the first unambiguous evidence of shorelines on the surface of Mars," said Di Achille. "The identification of the shorelines and accompanying geological evidence allows us to calculate the size and volume of the lake, which appears to have formed about 3.4 billion years ago."

A paper on the subject by Di Achille, CU-Boulder Assistant Professor Brian Hynek and CU-Boulder Research Associate Mindi Searls, all of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, has been published online in Geophysical Research Letters, a publication of the American Geophysical Union.

Images used for the study were taken by a high-powered camera known as the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment, or HiRISE. Riding on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, HiRISE can resolve features on the surface down to one meter in size from its orbit 200 miles above Mars.

An analysis of the HiRISE images indicate that water carved a 30-mile-long canyon that opened up into a valley, depositing sediment that formed a large delta. This delta and others surrounding the basin imply the existence of a large, long-lived lake, said Hynek, also an assistant professor in CU-Boulder's geological sciences department. The lake bed is located within a much larger valley known as the Shalbatana Vallis.

"Finding shorelines is a Holy Grail of sorts to us," said Hynek.

In addition, the evidence shows the lake existed during a time when Mars is generally believed to have been cold and dry, which is at odds with current theories proposed by many planetary scientists, he said. "Not only does this research prove there was a long-lived lake system on Mars, but we can see that the lake formed after the warm, wet period is thought to have dissipated."

Planetary scientists think the oldest surfaces on Mars formed during the wet and warm Noachan epoch from about 4.1 billion to 3.7 billion years ago that featured a bombardment of large meteors and extensive flooding. The newly discovered lake is believed to have formed during the Hesperian epoch and postdates the end of the warm and wet period on Mars by 300 million years, according to the study.

The deltas adjacent to the lake are of high interest to planetary scientists because deltas on Earth rapidly bury organic carbon and other biomarkers of life, according to Hynek. Most astrobiologists believe any present indications of life on Mars will be discovered in the form of subterranean microorganisms.

But in the past, lakes on Mars would have provided cozy surface habitats rich in nutrients for such microbes, Hynek said.

The retreat of the lake apparently was rapid enough to prevent the formation of additional, lower shorelines, said Di Achille. The lake probably either evaporated or froze over with the ice slowly turning to water vapor and disappearing during a period of abrupt climate change, according to the study.

Di Achille said the newly discovered pristine lake bed and delta deposits would be would be a prime target for a future landing mission to Mars in search of evidence of past life.

"On Earth, deltas and lakes are excellent collectors and preservers of signs of past life," said Di Achille. "If life ever arose on Mars, deltas may be the key to unlocking Mars' biological past."

University of Colorado team finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Mars
Orstio    June 17th, 2009 - 7:17 PM
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Re: University of Colorado team finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Ma
Kurgan    July 9th, 2009 - 9:57 PM
I wouldn't  be surprised to see seasonal "seeps"  eroding the surface now.  I remember arguing the exact opposite at SDC all those years ago.  Now I'm inclined to think that the methane is comming from biota in a sub-surface water system.   
Re: University of Colorado team finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Mars
payloadcontroller    July 13th, 2009 - 8:28 PM
If I recall correctly there HAS been evidence of possible seeps.   I am not ready to come down on one side or the other of the biota question. But one of the novels I'm working on currently HAS had me researching extremophiles a lot, so it wouldn't surprise me either way.
Re: University of Colorado team finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Mars
Orstio    July 13th, 2009 - 8:42 PM
While you're researching extremophiles, keep the water bear in mind:

http://www.everything-science.com/sci/Forum/Itemid,82/topic,5142.0

I think there is probably too much peroxide in the Martian soil for life, but then again, these little water bear guys survive in everything from glaciers to volcanos, so you never know what's sprouted up on another planet.
Re: University of Colorado team finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Mars
payloadcontroller    July 13th, 2009 - 9:14 PM
The water bears are kind of cute.    But I was thinking about the extremophiles that are found in the substrata a mile or more down and are quite happy there. Or Deinococcus radiodurans, otherwise known as "Conan the Bacterium." Either of those could probably survive on Mars. There has been speculation that they may have been seeded on Earth FROM Mars by hitching a ride on a Martian meteoroid.
Re: University of Colorado team finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Ma
Kurgan    July 15th, 2009 - 12:15 PM
A wiki tidbit:In 2003, U.S. scientists demonstrated that D. radiodurans could be used as a means of information storage that might survive a nuclear catastrophe. They translated the song It's a Small World into a series of DNA segments 150 base pairs long, inserted these into the bacteria, and were able to retrieve them without errors 100 bacterial generations later.        VERY cool!    I always thought that extremophiles evolved in a 'comfortable' environment and then adapted to the extremes. So, my thinking reguarding Mars has always been predicated on how long it was viable to life before the core cooled and the magnetosphere lost. I might be totally wrong about that as well.
Re: University of Colorado team finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Mars
payloadcontroller    July 15th, 2009 - 3:34 PM
Yes, I've seen the papers on using D.r. as information storage. It can be mutated through artificial means but not natural means.  One interesting fact about Mars is that, while it may not have much of a magnetosphere, the soil is composed in great percentage of magnetite.
Re: University of Colorado team finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Mars
Dingo1    July 17th, 2009 - 4:56 AM
Read "A Traveler's Guide to Mars" by Dr.  William K Hartmann.  Excellent guide to a Mars, and a well written Geological guide based on existing evidence.  Recent announcements are just confirming what the evidence has shown

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