Light Deposits Indicate Water Flowing on Mars
			
		
		
			Credit:  
Mars Global Surveyor
		
		
			What's creating light-toned deposits on Mars?   
Quite possibly -- water!  
Images of the same parts of 
mid-latitude Mars taken over the years but 
released only last week have shown unexpected new light-toned deposits 
where there were none before. 
One clear case is 
shown above, 
where the same crater on Mars is shown as photographed in 1999 August and again in 2005 September.  
The unusual deposit is visible only on the more recent photograph.
Apparent tributaries near the bottom bolster the 
leading hypothesis 
that water gushed out of the crater wall, flowed down the crater, 
and soon evaporated into the thin 
Martian atmosphere.  
Although 
frozen water-ice has been known near the 
Martian poles for years, 
free flowing surface water like this was not expected to be seen in the mid-latitudes of 
Mars.
If confirmed, such water springs might make more of 
Mars hospitable to life and 
human visitation than previously believed.