My opinion on the matter is that too many resources are extended to trying to prove whether or not there was water on Mars.
If there was water on Mars, the atmosphere needed to be thicker. 6-13 mB is just not enough pressure to keep a glass of liquid water, nevermind ponds, lakes, and oceans. Liquid water instantly vaporizes at that low pressure.
I think what we really need to understand was whether or not the Martian atmosphere was ever any thicker, and even that is not the root. What we really need to know is what would have enabled Mars to hold a thick atmosphere in the past, but not now.
To summarize: Without a means to hold a thick atmosphere, there is no thick atmosphere. Without a thick atmosphere, there is no liquid water.
http://www-mgcm.arc.nasa.gov/mgcm/HTML/FAQS/liquid.htmlLet's also consider the fact that the entire Martian atmosphere contains only 1-2 km
3 of water ice. This comes nowhere near the 13,000 km
3 of the Earth's atmospheric water vapour. If there were oceans, and they vaporized, one would expect the quantity of vapour in the atmosphere to be disproportionately high, and yet it is just the opposite.