Mercury,
January/February 2001 Table of Contents
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Image
Credit: NASA/Malin Space Science Systems |
According
to a new theory, Mars never had rivers, lakes, or oceans. It probably
never had liquid water flowing on its surface. Ever.
by
Nick Hoffman, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia
Mars today is
a dry planet, with an atmospheric pressure far too low to sustain
liquid water on the surface. But photos taken from orbit by Mariner
9, Vikings 1 and 2, and Mars Global Surveyor reveal channels that
look very much like dry riverbeds on Earth. For the last two decades,
most planetary scientists have believed that Mars experienced a
"warm and wet" period billions of years ago, when rivers
flowed across the surface and water sometimes pooled to form lakes
and oceans. Perhaps even life established a foothold in such an
environment.
"Not so
fast," says Australian geologist Nick Hoffman. In a controversial
new theory called "White Mars," which he published in
the August 2000 issue of the prestigious planetary science journal
Icarus, Hoffman argues that Mars never experienced a warm
and wet phase; it has always been a dry, barren planet with low
atmospheric pressure.
Hoffman
describes his White Mars theory, and the reasons why the warm and
wet model doesn't hold water. In Hoffman's view, Mars is a planet
dominated by carbon dioxide, not water. An expert in volcanic flows,
he describes how volcanic-like flows lubricated by liquid carbon-dioxide
could have carved the Martian channels. Not only does Hoffman's
White Mars model explain the channels, it explains many of the paradoxes
that have confounded believers in the warm and wet model for many
years. If Hoffman's view is correct, NASA's entire Mars exploration
program is based on a faulty premise. As Hoffman writes, "Mars
has always been a planet of legend and of the imagination."
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