Mercury,
September/October 2005 Table of Contents
by
Gabrielle A. Gianelli
It
seems scientists and laypeople alike have wondered for quite a long
time whether or not water exists on Mars. Italian astronomer Giovanni
Virginio Schiaparelli made the bold and widely popularized claim
in 1877 that he had discovered water canals on Mars: even though
he was convinced of their existence and believed them to be of natural
origin, he did not think it impossible that the canali were artificial
and created by sentient beings. But where on Mars were the bodies
of water filling the canali?
Since
the late reaches of the 19th century, we have come to know that
Schiaparelli's canali were figments of his and others' (do not forget
American businessman Percival Lowell's passion to understand the
Martian canals) imaginations. Yet we also are compelled to believe
that in the past there were large bodies of water on the Martian
surface.
Knowing
where those large bodies of water once were is the next step in
our understanding of the planet for three reasons. First, such knowledge
will aid researchers in the exploration of Mars because if the location
and existence of ancient oceans can be pinpointed, scientists can
send probes to study these special areas. Consider, for example,
that the area postulated as the site of an ancient northern ocean
is smoother than those in the southern regions: the area could provide
landing sites that would permit further investigation of the putative
coastline.
A second
reason we should determine the sites of ancient Martian seas is
that if water once existed on Mars, it is possible that conditions
for life obtained on the planet in the past and possibly even persist
into the present. The discovery of life or its remains on another
world would allow scientists the opportunity/chance to study organisms
that are entirely foreign to the life on our planet. It might also
help us understand more about life here — how life originated
on Earth, how it evolves, and even how and where we might look for
life on planets besides Earth and Mars. This leads to the third
reason to look for evidence of ancient bodies of water on Mars.
Any research concerning Mars will give scientists a better picture
of that planet and ours, too — their origins, fates, etc.
— because the two planets are so similar.
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