The Denver Post

HIDDEN LAKE

Study: Water buried deep in Mars

- By Emiliano Rodriguez Mega

Ahuge lake of salty water appears to be buried deep in Mars, raising the possibilit­y of finding life on the red planet, scientists reported Wednesday.

The discovery, based on observatio­ns by a European spacecraft, generated excitement from experts. Water is essential to life as we know it, and scientists have long sought to prove that the liquid is present on Mars.

“If these researcher­s are right, this is the first time we’ve found evidence of a large water body on Mars,” said Cassie Stuurman, a geophysici­st at the University of Texas who found signs of an enormous Martian ice deposit in 2016.

Scott Hubbard, a professor of astronauti­cs at Stanford University who served as NASA’s first Mars program director in 2000, called it “tremendous­ly exciting.”

“Our mantra back then was ‘follow the water.’ That was the one phrase that captured everything,” Hubbard said. “So this discovery, if it stands, is just thrilling because it’s the culminatio­n of that philosophy.”

The study, published in the journal Science, does not determine how deep the reservoir actually is. This means that scientists can’t specify whether it’s an undergroun­d pool, an aquiferlik­e body or just a layer of sludge.

To find the water, Italian researcher­s analyzed radar signals collected over three years by the European Space Agency’s Mars Express spacecraft. Their results suggest that a 12-milewide reservoir lies below ice about a mile thick in an area close to the planet’s south pole.

They spent at least two years examining the data to make sure they’d detected water, not ice or another substance.

“I really have no other explanatio­n,” said astro- physicist Roberto Orosei of Italy’s National Institute of Astrophysi­cs in Bologna and the lead author of the study.

Mars is very cold, but the water might have been kept from freezing by dissolved salts. It’s the same as when you put salt on a road, said Kirsten Siebach, a planetary geologist at Rice University in Houston who wasn’t part of the study.

“This water would be extremely cold, right at the point where it’s about to freeze. And it would be salty. Those are not ideal conditions for life to form,” Siebach said.

Still, she said, there are microbes on Earth that have been able to adapt to environmen­ts like that.

Said Orosei: “It’s tempting to think that this is the first candidate place where life could persist” on Mars.

He suspects that Mars may contain other hidden bodies of water, waiting to be discovered.

Our planetary neighbor has been a popular target for exploratio­n, with ambitious rovers on its surface and other probes examining the planet from orbit. In May, NASA launched another spacecraft, the InSight Mars lander, that will dig under the surface after it reaches a flat plain just north of the Martian equator in November.

 ?? USGS Astrogeolo­gy Science Center, Arizona State University/ESA/INAF ?? Above: An artist’s rendering of the Mars Express spacecraft probing the southern hemisphere of the planet.
USGS Astrogeolo­gy Science Center, Arizona State University/ESA/INAF Above: An artist’s rendering of the Mars Express spacecraft probing the southern hemisphere of the planet.
 ?? AFP/NASA/JPL/Malin Space Science Systems ?? This image taken from the NASA internet site shows the south polar cap of Mars as it appeared to the Mars Global Surveyor on April 17, 2000. A massive undergroun­d lake has been detected for the first time on Mars, raising the possibilit­y that more water — and maybe even life — exists there.
AFP/NASA/JPL/Malin Space Science Systems This image taken from the NASA internet site shows the south polar cap of Mars as it appeared to the Mars Global Surveyor on April 17, 2000. A massive undergroun­d lake has been detected for the first time on Mars, raising the possibilit­y that more water — and maybe even life — exists there.

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