Layered Mars: An Ancient Water World?
Pictured above,
layers upon layers stretch across
the floor of West Candor Chasma
within the immense martian
Valles Marineris.
Covering an area 1.5 by 2.9 kilometers, the full image
from the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft shows
over 100 individual beds.
Each strikingly uniform layer is smooth, hard enough to form steep edges,
and is 10 to 11 meters thick.
In a
press
conference yesterday scientists Michael Malin
and Ken Edgett presented this and other
new
images which show that the layered patterns exist at widespread
locations near the martian equator.
Their results indicate that some of the layered regions may be 3.5 billion
years old.
On planet Earth, layered patterns like these are formed from sediment
deposited over time by large bodies of water.
Likewise, the layered beds
on Mars may be
sedimentary rock formed in
ancient lakes
and seas.
The researchers caution, however, that other uniquely martian
processes may be responsible for the layering.
Did life arise on ancient Mars?
Because of their possible association with water,
a prime location for
future
searches for fossil remains of
martian life would be within these layers of Mars.