How Our View of Mars Has Changed from Lush Oasis to Arid Desert
The dusty-red sphere now called Mars has fascinated stargazers since the dawn of humanity, but Earthlings’ view of the planet has changed drastically over the years. Once thought of as a lush alien world teeming with life, it was later dismissed as an arid, desolate orb. But now, scientists have announced the Red Planet has long, fingerlike strips of seeping, salty, liquid water that just might aid in the search for extraterrestrial life.
The ancient Greeks and Romans named Mars—a planet barely more than half Earth’s size—after the god of war. But they likely didn’t realize it was another world, with two moons to boot, said Bruce Jakosky, a professor of geological sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder. []
Early astronomers had other fanciful, and often mistaken, views of Mars. In 1784, the British astronomer Sir William Herschel wrote that the dark areas on Mars were oceans, and the light areas land. He also speculated the planet was home to aliens, who “probably enjoy a situation similar to our own,” . (He also apparently thought intelligent life was living under the sun’s surface in a cool spot, NASA reported.)
It wasn’t until NASA’s in the 1960s and 1970s that researchers could confidently prove there were no alien-made canals, Zurek said.
“All the way up through [NASA’s] Mariner 6 and 7 in 1969, you could think of the as declining,” Jakosky said. “In 1971, we orbited the Mariner 9 spacecraft, and that changed things. It took global pictures of Mars, and we saw things that looked very Earth-like, including streambeds, river channels and volcanoes. People thought, ‘Well, maybe there’s the potential for liquid water and potential for life after all.’”
In the 1970s, the NASA Viking missions landed on Mars and took samples of the soil to look for signs of microbial life. But they recorded none, Jakosky said. In fact, the Viking mission scientists called Mars “self-sterilizing,” describing how the combination of the sun’s UV rays and the chemical properties of the soil prevented life from forming in those soils, according to NASA. []
Perhaps Mars had water millions or billions of years ago, but that water has since frozen on the surface or been lost to space, Zurek said. (The is already examining the Martian atmosphere and helping scientists decipher how Mars lost its water, if that did happen, he said.)
The new finding gives researchers a good spot to look for life on Mars, Zurek said. But the newfound salty streaks aren’t like rivers that flow on Earth, he cautioned. []
Any water on Mars is likely laden with , which lower water’s freezing point to about minus 70 degrees Celsius (minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit), Zurek said.
Moreover, the liquid water—if indeed it is that—only appears during the warm seasons, he said.
Extremely salty water isn’t necessarily good for life, but perhaps can live in those environments, he said.
“We don’t know what the might have been on the planet, if it ever originated,” Zurek said. “But at least this tells us some places where we could go look for evidence of this. It is briny, and there may not be much of it, but it is a place that we could go look.”
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