Manila Bulletin

NASA’s Curiosity finds how water helped shape Mars mountain

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WASHINGTON, DC, United States ( PNA/ Xinhua) — US space agency NASA said Monday that Mars’ Mount Sharp, where its Curiosity rover is exploring, was built by sediments deposited in a large lake bed over tens of millions of years.

The formation of Mount Sharp, a five-kilometer-high layered mountain at the center of Gale Crater, has been a challengin­g question for researcher­s.

Curiosity landed inside Gale Crater in 2012 and its primary destinatio­n was Mount Sharp, which it arrived at three months ago.

Currently, the rover is investigat­ing the lowest sedimentar­y layers of Mount Sharp, a section of rock 150 meters high dubbed the Murray formation.

Observatio­ns by Curiosity showed that the mountain was created by sediments from the crater rim highlands and transporte­d toward the center of the crater in alluvial fans, deltas, and wind-blown drifts, NASA said.

“During wet periods, water pooled in lakes where sediments settled out in the center of crater,” it said.

“Even during dry periods in the crater center, groundwate­r would have ex- isted beneath the surface. Then, during the next wet period it would resurface to form the next lake.

This alternatio­n of lakes, rivers and deserts could have represente­d a longlastin­g habitable environmen­t.”

Later, after the crater had at least partially filled with sediment, erosion of previously deposited sedimentar­y layers occurred, exposing the ancient sequence of lake, river and desert environmen­ts as a series of bands, or layers, along the lower flanks of Mount Sharp.

“We are making headway in solving the mystery of Mount Sharp,” Curiosity Project Scientist John Grotzinger of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California, said in a statement. “Where there’s now a mountain, there may have once been a series of lakes.”

As Curiosity climbs higher on Mount Sharp, the researcher­s will have a series of experiment­s to show patterns in how the atmosphere and the water and the sediments interact, Grotzinger said.

The findings also indicated that ancient Mars maintained a climate that could have produced long-lasting lakes at many locations on the Red Planet.

“If our hypothesis for Mount Sharp holds up, it challenges the notion that warm and wet conditions were transient, local, or only undergroun­d on Mars,” said Ashwin Vasavada, Curiosity deputy project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

“A more radical explanatio­n is that Mars’ ancient, thicker atmosphere raised temperatur­es above freezing globally, but so far we don’t know how the atmosphere did that,” Vasavada said.

Despite earlier evidence from several Mars missions that pointed to wet environmen­ts on ancient Mars, modeling of the ancient climate has yet to identify the conditions that could have produced long periods warm enough for stable water on the surface.

NASA said the new findings could also help guide plans for future missions to seek signs of Martian life.

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