The Philippine Star

River flowing on Mars may be dry sand, not water

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ARIZONA (AP) — A new study suggests that dark streaks on Mars represent flowing sand — not water.

Monday’s news throws cold water on 2015 research that indicated that lines on some Martian slopes were signs of water currently on the planet.

Instead, Arizona scientists report in Nature Geoscience that these lines appear more like dry, steep flows of dry sand, rather than water trickling downhill, at or near the surface.

If water is present, they said, it’s likely a small amount — and not conducive to life. Nasa, though, said the jury is still out.

The lead scientist for Nasa’s Mars exploratio­n program, Michael Meyer, points out that the latest study does not rule out the presence of water.

But he acknowledg­es: “It just may not be as exciting as the idea of rivers going down the sides of cliffs.”

Nasa’s Mars Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter provided the images of these so-called recurring slope lineae, or RSL. Thousands have been spotted on Mars, from the equator midway to each pole.

The team led by the US Geological Survey’s Colin Dundas in Flagstaff, Arizona, measured 151 of these dark lines at 10 sites.

Most of them end with slopes between 28 degrees and 35 degrees, a match for active sand dunes on both Mars and Earth, according to the researcher­s.

A thin layer of dust on top that shifts and sometimes brightens the surface might help explain why these streaks seem to occur in the Martian summertime and then disappear, only to reappear the next year.

If these lines are dry, “this suggests that recent Mars has not had considerab­le volumes of liquid water,” the researcher­s write.

That’s key because water in liquid form would be essential to microbial life.

Dundas and his colleagues stress that many questions remain, demanding further study.

To Meyer, this is what makes Mars so fun. Scientists have long gone back and forth thinking of Mars as being dry or wet depending on the most recent data.

“I still think that Mars poses a great potential for having had life early on in its history,” Meyer said. “As long as that’s true, we also have a reasonable possibilit­y of life still being on Mars.

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