June 23, 2012
from NewsDiscovery Website
The interior of Mars holds vast
reservoirs of water.
The finding makes sense, given that past work has shown
that water
once flowed on the surface.
Until now, Earth was
the only planet known to have vast reservoirs of water in its
interior.
NASA
The interior of Mars holds vast
reservoirs of water, with some spots apparently as wet as Earth's
innards, scientists say.
The finding upends previous studies, which had estimated that the
Red Planet's internal water stores were scanty at best - something
of a surprise, given that liquid water apparently
flowed on the
Martian surface long ago.
"It's been puzzling why previous
estimates for the planet's interior have been so dry," co-author
Erik Hauri, of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, said in a
statement.
"This new research makes sense and
suggests that volcanoes may have been the primary vehicle for
getting water to the surface."
New concepts for
Mars-probing rovers
would use Martian
wind to move around the planet.
The scientists examined two Martian
meteorites that formed in the planet's mantle, the layer under the
crust.
These rocks landed on Earth about 2.5
million years ago, after being blasted off the Red Planet by a
violent impact. Using a technique called secondary ion mass
spectrometry, the team determined that the mantle from which the
meteorites derived contained between 70 and 300 parts per million (ppm)
of water.
Earth's mantle, for comparison, holds
roughly 50-300 ppm water, researchers said.
"The results suggest that water was
incorporated during the formation of Mars and that the planet
was able to store water in its interior during the planet's
differentiation," Hauri said.
Some of this water apparently made its
made to the surface in the ancient past.
NASA's
Spirit and Opportunity rovers,
which landed on the Red Planet in 2004, have found plenty of
evidence that Mars was far warmer and wetter billions of years ago
than it is today.
The two golf-cart-size robots have even spotted signs of ancient
hydrothermal systems, suggesting that some places on the Red Planet
once had both water and an energy source - two key ingredients for
the existence of life as we know it.
While the new results should help scientists better understand Mars
and its history, they could also shed light on the evolution of
large, rocky bodies in a more general sense, researchers said.
"Not only does this study explain
how Mars got its water, it provides a mechanism for hydrogen
storage in all the terrestrial planets at the time of their
formation," lead author Francis McCubbin, of the University of
New Mexico, said in a statement.
The study was published in the journal
Geology on June 15.
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