
| NASA Center: |
Jet Propulsion Laboratory |
| Image # : |
PIA01033 |
| Date : |
06/22/2000
|
|---|
|
Title
Evidence for Recent Liquid Water on Mars
Full Description
This image, acquired by the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter
Camera (MOC) in May 2000 shows numerous examples of martian gullies
that all start--or head--in a specific layer roughly a hundred meters
beneath the surface of Mars.
These features are located on the south-facing wall of a trough in the
Gorgonum Chaos region, an area found to have many examples of gullies
proposed to have formed by seepage and runoff of liquid water in recent
martian times. The layer from which the gullies emanate has recessed
backward to form an overhang beneath a harder layer of rock. The larger
gullies have formed an alcove--an area above the overhang from which
debris has collapsed to leave a dark-toned scar. Below the layer of
seepage is found a dark, narrow channel that runs down the slope to an
apron of debris.
The small, bright, parallel features at the base of the cliff at the
center-right of the picture is a series of large windblown ripples.
Although the dark tone of the alcoves and channels in this image is
not likely to be the result of wet ground (the contrast in this image
has been enhanced), it does suggest that water has seeped out of the
ground and moved down the slope quite recently. Sharp contrasts between
dark and light areas are hard to maintain on Mars for very long periods
of time because dust tends to coat surfaces and reduce brightness
differences. To keep dust from settling on a surface, it has to have
undergone some process of erosion (wind, landslides, water runoff)
relatively recently.
There is no way to know how recent this activity was, but educated
guesses center between a few to tens of years, and it is entirely
possible that the area shown in this image has water seeping out of the
ground today. Centered near 37.9S, 170.2W, sunlight illuminates the MOC
image from the upper left, north is toward the upper right. The context
view above is from the Viking 1 orbiter and was acquired in 1977. The
Viking picture is illuminated from the upper right; north is up. The
small white box in the context frame shows the location of the high
resolution MOC view.
Keywords
Mars Global Surveyor MGS Mars Orbiter Camera MOC Gullies Trough Water
Subject Category
Planet-Mars, Mars Global Surveyor,
Reference Numbers
- Center:
JPL
- Center Number:
PIA01033
- GRIN DataBase Number:
GPN-2000-001432
Source Information
- Creator/Photographer: NASA, JPL, Malin Space Science Systems
- Original Source: DIGITAL
| Resolution | Format | Width (Pixels) | Height (Pixels) | Size (KBytes) |
Thumbnail |
.jpg |
86 |
74 |
10 |
Small |
.jpg |
608 |
526 |
235 |
Medium |
.jpg |
1424 |
1233 |
1,058 |
Large |
.jpg |
1424 |
1233 |
1,052 |
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Updated October 31, 2002
History Questions: NASA History Office
Responsible NASA Official: Steve Garber
Author: Michael Hahn. Editor: Dwayne A. Day
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