Explanation:
What created this unusual terrain on Mars?
The floors of several mid-latitude craters in
Hellas Basin on Mars appear unusually grooved, flat, and shallow.
New radar images from the
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter bolster an exciting hypothesis: huge
glaciers of buried ice.
Evidence indicates that
such glaciers cover an area larger than a city and extend as much as a kilometer deep.
The ice would have been kept from
evaporating into the
thin Martian air by a covering of dirt.
If true, this would indicate the largest volume of water ice outside of the
Martian poles,
much larger than the
frozen puddles
recently discovered by the
Phoenix lander.
Such lake-sized ice blocks located so close to the Martian equator might make a good drinking reservoir for
future astronauts exploring Mars.
How the glaciers originally formed remains a mystery.
In the meantime, before packing up to
explore Mars, please
take a moment to
suggest a name
for NASA's
next Martian rover.
digg_url = 'http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap081124.html'; digg_skin = 'compact';
ein vo mine enkel bringt eim vo dine denn mol en mars-stei mit, ok? seisch dim, er söll mim denn defür e bier zahle. wobi i denk mir müessted da schriftlich witergeh, wöll mer beidi futsch si werded, bis mars-reise für normali lüt erschwinglich sind.
Du häsch vergesse das d'Lamo i 15 Johr werdet cho und üs es Lebe witab vo allne üsne Vorstellige werdet ermögliche wels Mitleid mit sonere underentwicklete Zivilisation händ wie mir.
hani nöd gseh nei. eifach so meini da, wöll mir nödemol mit üs selber so richtig z'schlagchömed. mir hend jo no nödemol e guet funktionierends system zum zemelebe, wie üs d'finanzkrise zeigt het.