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Driven To Distractions©
The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 05-06-2000 ]
Category
[ Science ]
sub-Categoy
[ Astronomy ]

      [Mars one cool place
      Images show exotic, frozen landscape
      By MATTHEW FORDAHL -The Associated Press
      Tuesday, April 11, 2000


      This image from NASA's Mars Global Surveyor shows intricate, frosting-like layers near the south pole that could help scientists unlock the secrets of the Red Planet's climate history. The layers of dry ice, water ice and dust most likely formed as Mars' climate changed. (AP Photo/ NASA)

      PASADENA, Calif. -New images from NASA's Mars Global Surveyor show intricate, frosting-like layers near the south pole that could help scientists unlock the secrets of the Red Planet's climate history.

       The layers of dry ice, water ice and dust most likely formed as Mars' climate changed. Scientists hope to better understand the forces that shaped them by closely studying the images and comparing them to others taken in the future.


       "We're not really sure what's going on there," said Michael Malin, president and chief scientist of
      Malin Space Science Systems. "What you can see in those pictures are flat layers that have been eroded in two very different ways."

       One image -a mosaic of several pictures -shows squiggly lines that resemble frosting but are actually layers exposed in the walls of a shallow trough.


       "Something has eroded this ... trough, and we're seeing the layering expressed both as etches and as ridges in this depression," Malin said.


       The second picture, covering an area a few miles away from the first, shows a flat surface with circular pits of the same depth eroded into the ice. Scientists believe the erosion may be an effect of the dry ice that makes up the polar cap.


       "We have a concept that these things are recording changes in the Martian environment, but we don't know exactly what process is doing it," he said.


       The images released Monday and posted on the
      Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Web site were taken by the probe's Mars Orbiter Camera, which was built and operated by Malin's firm. The mosaics resolve features to the size of a small house and cover a 6-mile by 3-mile mile area.

       The orbiting spacecraft captured the images roughly 320 miles over the southern ice cap in October, two months before the Mars Polar Lander disappeared while attempting to touch down more than 100 miles to the north.  
      ]


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