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    Articles about Planet Mars
    Locating Planet Mars - Tips and Tricks for Finding the “Evening Star” Mars
    2007-12-02 15:30:05
    Mars has always been a fascinating object in the night sky, probably because it is one of the brightest objects (not taking the Moon into account) in the night sky. Another reason for being a fascinating object has probably been that Mars moves in relation to the background stars. This happens because the planets orbit [...]...
    By: Homeboy's Astro Blog
     
    More evidence of water on Planet Mars
    2007-02-16 00:39:00
    New images of a craggy, fissure-filled canyon on Mars provide evidence of long-term underground water flows that may have provided a suitable environment for microbial life, scientists said.''If there are any sort of fossils, these would be good places to look,'' the University of Arizona's Chris Okubo said in a telephone interview yesterday.While previous NASA probes have found evidence of past and even present-day water on Mars, scientists previously had few clues if the water existed long enough for life to evolve.The new findings show light-colored features cutting across dark bands in an area known as Candor Chasma. Okubo and his colleagues believe they are looking at places where rock has been chemically altered by water flowing across the fractures.''Fluids apparently resided within rock long enough to allow geochemical processes to occur,'' Okubo said. ''That's typically very slow.'' In addition, the rock was once underground, providing a safe haven for any microbes from radiation and atmospheric hazards.''These areas are very good for being an oasis for any sort of biologic activity,'' Okubo said.Similar terrain exists on Earth, such as in the Colorado plateau.''It was sort of surprising to see these images from Mars because it's almost exactly like what we see in the field,'' Okubo said.Scientists say the fractures, which are several hundred yards (meters) long and about four yards (meters) wide, likely existed before any pools of water seeped underground.''The fractures then acted as nice conduits for the fluids to flow underground, like pipes,'' Okubo said. ''What we're seeing now is an exposure of bedrock that was buried at several kilometers (miles) depth at the time the fluids were present.'' Images of Candor Chasma, one of several large canyons that are part of Mars' sprawling Valles Marineris, were taken during tests last fall of NASA's new Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The pictures show fractures stretching hundred...
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