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Mars might have had deep, icy rivers in its recent geological past

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Mars might have had deep, icy rivers in its recent geological past

Scientists have found the remnants of mid-latitude glaciers on Mars, which reveal signs of deep, icy rivers in the Red Planets recent geological past.

Washington, May 21 : Scientists have found the remnants of mid-latitude glaciers on Mars, which reveal signs of deep, icy rivers in the Red Planet's recent geological past.

According to a report in Discovery News, Mars glaciologist James Dickson of Brown University and his colleagues followed the trail of telltale glacial remnants at the edges of Mars' northern lowlands.

They were surprised to find signs that a glacier once traveled in a direction now uphill, toward a canyon's edge. Unless the glacier somehow defied gravity, the only explanation is that it was once higher than the canyon.

"What we see right now is a glacier that looks like it flowed uphill," Dickson told Discovery News. "That can't happen," he added.

To make the features conform to gravity, the researchers imagined filling a neighboring valley with ice so high that it could then flow down toward this canyon.

The current uphill appearance is the result of most of the ice evaporating away, leaving debris and the surface features seen today.

"We are very confident that there was a kilometer of ice at this location," said Dickson.

Nearby lowlands would also have been filled with ice, in some areas two kilometers deep, he explained. The expansive ice sheet was perhaps comparable to what covered North America during the last Ice Age.

"They are pretty much on target," said Mars researcher Jeffery Kargel of the University of Arizona of Dickson's conclusions. "What's more, there's no reason to believe all the ice is gone from these glaciers," he added.

"The morphology indicates to me that there's still a lot of ice there," Kargel told Discovery News. "These are glaciers that are alive and kicking. They're probably still very, very slowly chugging along," he added.

The waxing and waning of such gigantic, mid-latitude glaciers tens of millions of years ago fits with a scenario advocated by Dickson's colleague and co-author James Head, also of Brown University.

According to Head, the cause of the climate fluctuations is the very wide and gradual wobble of Mars' spin axis, which, unlike Earth's axis, is not stabilized by a large moon.

Over the ages, Mars' wobble sometimes tilts the planet's poles lower and closer to the sun. This melts the polar ice and sends the water snowing down on the cooler mid-latitudes.

We just happen to be looking at Mars at a time when its spin axis is gently tilted, so it resembles Earth with ice concentrated primarily at the poles, Head explained.

ANI

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