Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mars once looked like Canada's High Arctic: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Aug, 2020 06:19 PM
  • Mars once looked like Canada's High Arctic: study

The deep valleys scarred into the surface of Mars under thick sheets of ice show that the planet once mirrored the Canadian High Arctic, says a new study.

Published Monday in the journal Nature Geoscience, the study says many of the valley networks carved into the surface of Mars were formed by water melting beneath glacial ice. It means there were fewer free-flowing rivers than previously thought.

Study author Anna Grau Galofre, a former University of British Columbia PhD student in the department of Earth, ocean and atmospheric sciences, said about 3.5 billion years ago the Martian surface looked like the surface of Canada 20,000 years ago.

"We're talking about a planet that's painted like a brother of Earth," she said.

Grau Galofre and her team compared surface data of Mars with that of Devon Island in the Canadian Arctic.

The study describes Devon Island as a cold, dry, polar desert, where the glaciers and their retreat imitate what took place on Mars billions of years ago.

"Imagine ice sheets that are kilometres thick, really, really thick," she said.

"If you were to just lift the ice sheet and see below, you would see a landscape. And this landscape is constituted of several different channels, expanded pathways like the plumbing of the ice."

What this tells scientists is that while there may have been a warm and wet Mars on which there was rainfall, it's far more likely that the planet's surface resembled that of the Canadian Arctic, she said.

"It is like a time evolution of the climate that we're looking at here. There were the warm and wet periods that talked about the oceans. And there were the cold and icy periods."

This could mean that the climate on Mars either changed slowly through time from a cooler to a warmer period, or the other way around, she said.

The new findings brings up an "interesting discussion point" about life on Mars, Grau Galofre said.

"That's actually not a bad thing in terms of an environment to sustain life."

Lake Vostok on Antarctica is covered by a thick sheet of ice but has plenty of life, such as bacteria, she said.

"And they have been there for a long time, up to a million years, pretty much isolated by the ice sheet."

The ice guarantees the creatures get water and also provides a stable environment, especially on a planet like Mars, which can have searing days and freezing nights, said Grau Galofre.

The ice sheet also protects life from solar radiation, she added.

The study could be expanded to include the Jezero Crater, where NASA's Perseverance is scheduled to land on Mars because it may have once harboured life, she said.

Mars is the first and obvious place to start looking for life because it still has northern and southern ice caps, as well as a small fraction of water in the atmosphere, Grau Galofre said.

Evidence of water shows there is life or there was a time when life existed, she said.

"That's a big step in terms of trying to answer this question — where are we coming from and are we alone in the universe," Grau Galofre said.

"I think by finding life somewhere else in the universe we can also answer a lot about what is life and what are we doing here."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Mountie investigated after alleged assault during health check

B.C. Mountie investigated after alleged assault during health check
The RCMP say two investigations are underway into the actions of one of its officers after a video was released in a court case that alleges a woman was injured during a health check in Kelowna, B.C.

B.C. Mountie investigated after alleged assault during health check

University of B.C. study warns wildfire smoke could make COVID-19 symptoms worse

University of B.C. study warns wildfire smoke could make COVID-19 symptoms worse
A study by University of British Columbia researchers underscores the immediate, harmful health effects of wildfire smoke and says there are concerning implications during the COVID-19 pandemic.

University of B.C. study warns wildfire smoke could make COVID-19 symptoms worse

Body of a male found in a park in Abbotsford

Body of a male found in a park in Abbotsford
Abbotsford Emergency Services responded to the parking lot of John Mahoney Park last night at approximately 7:30 pm for the report of an unresponsive male. The male was found in the driver’s seat of a white SUV bearing out of province license plates.

Body of a male found in a park in Abbotsford

Surrey libraries launches takeout service

Surrey libraries launches takeout service
Surrey Libraries has announced the launch of contactless Takeout service at six branches serving Surrey’s town centres. City Centre, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Newton, and Semiahmoo library branches will be providing the service starting June 26. 

Surrey libraries launches takeout service

Vancouver Mayor wants to get rid off street checks by the VPD

Vancouver Mayor wants to get rid off street checks by the VPD
Vancouver's mayor is calling for an end to the practice of street checks by Vancouver police. Mayor Kennedy Stewart who also chairs the Park Board will put forth a motion in council to direct the board to make the change a priority.

Vancouver Mayor wants to get rid off street checks by the VPD

Surrey Makes PPE Companies Hit $4M in Sales

Surrey Makes PPE Companies Hit $4M in Sales
16 local manufacturers have retooled to serve the Canadian PPE supply chain Sixteen manufacturers participating in the Surrey Makes PPE program have sold over $4 million worth of personal protective equipment (PPE) to help Canadians combat COVID-19.

Surrey Makes PPE Companies Hit $4M in Sales