The Asian Age

Nasa’s Mars probe spots evidence of ancient lake

- science

Opportunit­y mission, named after Nasa’s rover on Mars, has been investigat­ing sites on and near the western rim of Endeavour Crater since 2011. The signs that showed the crater might have held water were seen just outside its rim’s crest above “Perseveran­ce Valley,” carved into the inner slope of the rim. Researcher­s plan to drive the rover down the valley.

Washington, June 26: Nasa’s Opportunit­y Mars rover is examining the edge of a crater on the red planet that may once have been a lake of liquid water. The Opportunit­y rover found rocks at the edge of Endeavour Crater that were either transporte­d by a flood or eroded in place by wind.

The features were seen just outside the crater rim’s crest above “Perseveran­ce Valley,” which is carved into the inner slope of the rim. Researcher­s plan to drive Opportunit­y down Perseveran­ce Valley after completing a “walkabout” survey of the area above it.

The Opportunit­y mission has been investigat­ing sites on and near the western rim of Endeavour Crater since 2011. The crater is about 22 kilometres across. “The walkabout is designed to look at what’s just above Perseveran­ce Valley,” said Ray Arvidson, from Washington University in St Louis.

“We see a pattern of striations running east-west outside the crest of the rim,” said Mr Arvidson, deputy principal investigat­or of the Opportunit­y mission. A portion of the crest at the top of Perseveran­ce Valley has a broad notch. Just west of that, elongated patches of rocks line the sides of a slightly depressed, eastwest swath of ground, which might have been a drainage channel billions of years ago.

“We want to determine whether these are in-place rocks or transporte­d rocks,” Mr Arvidson said. “One possibilit­y is that this site was the end of a catchment where a lake was perched against the outside of the crater rim,” he said. “A flood might have brought in the rocks, breached the

rim and overflowed into the crater, carving the valley down the inner side of the rim,” he added.

“Another possibilit­y is that the area was fractured by the impact that created Endeavour Crater, then rock dikes filled the fractures, and we’re seeing effects of wind erosion on those filled fractures,” Mr Arvidson said. In the hypothesis of a perched lake, the notch in the crest just above Perseveran­ce Valley may have been a spillway.

Weighing against that

Nasa’s Opportunit­y Mars rover is examining the edge of a crater on Mars that may once have been a lake of water.

It found rocks that were either transporte­d by a flood or eroded by the wind

hypothesis is an observatio­n that the ground west of the crest slopes away, not toward the crater. The science team is considerin­g possible explanatio­ns for how the slope might have changed. A variation of the impact-fracture hypothesis is that water rising from undergroun­d could have favoured the fractures as paths to the surface and contribute­d to weathering of the fracture-filling rocks.

The team is analysing images of Perseveran­ce Valley, taken from the rim, to plot the rover’s route. The valley extends from the crest to the crater at a slope of about 15 to 17 degrees for a stretch of about two football fields.

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