The Free Press Journal

Volcanic eruptions may have led to rock formation on Red Planet

- PIC: PINTEREST.CO.UK

Explosive volcanic eruptions that shot jets of hot ash, rock and gas skyward are the probable source of a mysterious Martian rock formation near the planet’s equator, says a new study. The Medusae Fossae Formation is a massive, unusual deposit of soft rock with undulating hills and abrupt mesas.

Scientists first observed the Medusae Fossae with NASA’s Mariner spacecraft in the 1960s, but were perplexed as to how it formed. The current study suggests the formation was deposited during explosive volcanic eruptions on the Red Planet more than three billion years ago.

The formation is about onefifth as large as the continenta­l US and 100 times more massive than the largest explosive volcanic deposit on Earth, making it the largest known explosive volcanic deposit in the solar system, according to the study authors.

“This is a massive deposit, not only on a Martian scale, but also in terms of the solar system, because we do not know of any other deposit that is like this,” said study lead author Lujendra Ojha, a planetary scientist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, US.

The researcher­s believe that the new finding could add to scientists’ understand­ing of Mars’s interior and its past potential for habitabili­ty. The eruptions that created the deposit could have spewed massive amounts of climate-altering gases into Mars’ atmosphere and ejected enough water to cover Mars in a global ocean more than nine centimeter­s thick, Ojha said. Previous radar measuremen­ts of Mars’s surface suggested the Medusae Fossae had an unusual compositio­n, but scientists were unable to determine whether it was made of highly porous rock or a mixture of rock and ice.

In the new study, the researcher­s used gravity data from various Mars orbiter spacecraft to measure the Medusae Fossae’s density for the first time. They found the rock is unusually porous it is about two-thirds as dense as the rest of the Martian crust.

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