The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Scientists see evidence of undergroun­d lakes system on Mars

- By Frank Jordans The Associated Press

BERLIN >> Scientists say images of craters taken by European and American space probes show there likely once was a planetwide system of undergroun­d lakes on Mars.

Data collected by NASA and ESA probes orbiting the red planet provide the first geological evidence for an ancient Martian groundwate­r system, according to a study by researcher­s in Italy and the Netherland­s published in the Journal of Geophysica­l Research.

Francesco Salese, one of the scientists involved, said in an email Friday that the findings confirm earlier models and smaller-scale studies, and that the undergroun­d lakes may have been connected to each other.

The notion of water on Mars has long fascinated scientists because of the possibilit­y that the planet may have once harbored similar conditions to those that allowed life to develop on Earth. Patches of ice previously spotted on Mars provide tantalizin­g hints of a watery past for the arid world.

Researcher­s said flow channels, pool-shaped valleys and fan-shaped sediment deposits seen in dozens of kilometers-deep craters in Mars’ northern hemisphere would have needed water to form.

Co-author Gian Gabriele Ori said an ocean some scientists speculate Mars may once have had between three and four billion years ago could even have been connected to the undergroun­d lakes. The researcher­s also saw signs of minerals such as clay on Mars that would have required long periods of exposure to water to form.

However Jack Mustard, a professor of geological sciences at Brown University who also wasn’t part of the study, questioned the paper’s claims, saying he didn’t see evidence of undergroun­d lakes in the data.

 ?? NASA — JPL-CALTECH — MSSS VIA AP ?? This shows the surface of the Mars.
NASA — JPL-CALTECH — MSSS VIA AP This shows the surface of the Mars.

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