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Mars May Have Been 1/3 Ocean

coondoggie sends in a snippet from Network World, as is his wont: "It's possible that a huge ocean covered one-third of the surface of Mars some 3.5 billion years ago, a finding likely to reignite an old argument about that amount of water on the red planet, according to a new report. The study by the University of Colorado at Boulder is the first to integrate multiple data sets of river deltas, valley networks and topography from a cadre of NASA and European Space Agency orbiting missions of Mars dating back to 2001, the researchers claim." The National Geographic coverage of the news gives some air time to those doubtful that this study will prove definitive.

118 comments

  1. maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by ChipMonk · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They just proved they can bring back material from an asteroid. Let's see if they can duplicate the feat on Mars.

    1. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by JoshuaZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

      We don't know if the capsule from Hayabusa does contain material yet. Also note that a sample-return mission to Mars will be much more difficult than a sample-return mission to an asteroid. The gravity of an asteroid is negligible. But Mars has gravity that is around a third that of Earth. That's a lot. So a sampling robot would need to land on Mars and then return fighting against the large Martian gravity well. It would probably need to carry its fuel with it which means it would need to have a lot of mass to start with and which would make a safe landing even more difficult. We'll probably have successful sample-return from Mars before a human mission their but the technical difficulty with even a sample-return mission is immense.

    2. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by JWSmythe · · Score: 4, Funny

          Escape velocity, fuel supply, navigation. People always bring up those pesky problems. Gimme a spaceship that runs on dilithium crystals that you can run a starship at multiples of the speed of light indefinitely (or at least until the episode plot calls for them to be used up).

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    3. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by symbolset · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Update: it's been opened. It contains material. The report is due six months or so, so set a tickle.

      Mars is easier than an asteroid. At Mars you have a planet to cancel your Delta-V with its gravity and atmosphere (limited though Mars' atmosphere is, it does help). Hitting an asteroid and returning is roughly twice as hard as hitting Mars and returning because you have to halt your motion at the asteroid using propulsion. It's a miracle Hyabusa returned at all - and it was three years late - because it missed its return window and had to wait for Earth to come back into position. The efforts of the ground team could be considered heroic - if some blood had been spilled.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    4. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by denmarkw00t · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You could, in theory, work around these issues in different ways. You could include fuel containers in the payload with parachutes - if we can give the robot some way to find them it can navigate to and attach them when ready. You could also send multiple rockets, some with fuel and one for the robot, but having them find eachother would be more challenging and landing areas would be much more prone to error in the proximity.

      Still, it isn't impossible.

    5. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by MichaelSmith · · Score: 3, Interesting

      One plan for Mars sample return I read about involves automatic docking in low Mars orbit. One stage lands and a rover loads it up with material. An ascent stage (really just a missile) lifts off for low orbit. It docks with an orbiter which has enough juice to return to Earth.

      All in all it is probably more productive to send better surface labs.

    6. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by CrashandDie · · Score: 0, Troll

      Duh dude.

      You just said Mars' gravity was only one third of Earth's, so considering it already left Earth's atmosphere, why would the probe have a problem with a one-third-puss-gravity well?

      Seriously, bro, THINK!

    7. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by takev · · Score: 2, Funny

      Someone probably slashed their finger open on the inside of a computer case, dropping blood on the motherboard. So in all likelihood blood has been spilled by the ground crew.

    8. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by stevelinton · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Getting to Mars is, in some was, easier than getting to an asteroid, because you can stop for free at Mars. Getting home again is much harder. There's no cheap way OFF Mars.

    9. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by jplopez · · Score: 1

      Moon has gravity that is around a sixth of Earth, and the Eagle module managed to lift off with its more than 10K pounds and 2 men on board. Would it be that hard to bring back a couple kg. of rocks down here?

    10. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      On Mars there isn't much of an atmosphere so parachutes wouldn't work.

    11. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Teun · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Oh?

      Then why have parachutes been deployed on virtually every successful Mars landing?

      --
      "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
    12. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Narishma · · Score: 1

      Go tell that to all the landers that used them to slow down their descent.

      --
      Mada mada dane.
    13. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      At least you can put most of your fuel in orbir around Mars. You only need enough on the craft to break orbit, which is still a fair amount, but nothing approaching the total load. Half the fuel typically used on a craft is there simply to lift the other half of the fuel.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    14. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Hognoxious · · Score: 2, Funny

      Or attach it to a really long leash.

      [This post brought to you by the institute of cord spinners, rope braiders and string twisters]

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    15. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Different definition of wouldn't work.

    16. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by stevelinton · · Score: 3, Informative

      Let's do the numbers.

      The ascent stage (ie the Mars to Low Mars Orbit transport) needs about 4.1 km s^-1 of delta-V. About twice what you need from the Moon, but less than half what you need from Earth. The Mars orbit return vehicle, which doesn't need to land on Mars needs about 2.3 km s^-1 to get into a transfer orbit back to Earth. (figures from wikipedia).

      This is definitely challenging, ascent stage most challenging of all. We need a rocket that can survive launch from Earth, 9 months coasting, aerocapture and aerobraking at Mars, impact with the Mars surface, a few months sitting on Mars and then take off with no support systems, deliver 4+kms^-1 of delta-V and automatically dock with the orbiting component of the system. The durability requirement pretty much rules out cryogenic fuels, and even relatively stable liquid fuels like kerosene/nitric acid might give trouble, both due to the cold conditions on Mars and the extra mass of tankage robust enough to survive the journey, so you're probably looking at solids.

      A few quick checks reveal that good solid rockets have an ISP of maybe 265s, giving a mass ratio of perhaps 10 for Mars to Low Mars orbit, so we need an ascent stage roughly 90% of which is solid rocket propellant (or multiple ascent stages, adding complexity). Suppose we can get the payload capsule + docking system down to 10kg and our solid rocket motors are 95% propellant (5% nozzles and casing -- this might be optimistic) we get a mass of 200kg launching from Mars. This is actually less bad than I'd feared. Seems that a Viking sized lander could probably do it. A 1 ton or so lander includes a digging tool and maybe a mini-rover to collect 5kg of rock and load them into a 5kg capsule with some tiny thrusters on it. That sits on a 200kg solid fuel rocket that gets into Low Mars Orbit and drops the capsule, which docks with a similar sized vehicle with 100kg of solid fuel some batteries and electronics and a heat shield for Earth reentry.

      So we need two launches to Mars transfer, each about 1 ton payload, plus heat shields for aero-braking/aero-capture on Mars. Should be doable as two medium large launches from Earth

    17. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      Problems are incentives for creative engineers find a solution.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    18. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      Good plan

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    19. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by pizzach · · Score: 1

      That is how the Japanese are committing seppuku nowadays? How things have changed....

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    20. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by butalearner · · Score: 1

      Mars is easier than an asteroid. At Mars you have a planet to cancel your Delta-V with its gravity and atmosphere (limited though Mars' atmosphere is, it does help). Hitting an asteroid and returning is roughly twice as hard as hitting Mars and returning because you have to halt your motion at the asteroid using propulsion.

      No, you are thinking linearly. Remember that asteroids have higher orbital energy, so they simply put Hayabusa on a constant-thrust spiral intercept trajectory, thanks to its ion engines. Since gravity is negligible, they only needed small delta-v's for station keeping around the asteroid when they got there. Then when they wanted to leave they just had to do the opposite, slowly bleed away the orbital energy.

      You could do the same thing with Mars, but it's far more difficult because the landing craft will have to be a heck of a lot sturdier than the one that landed on the asteroid, plus it needs to be able to get back off the planet.

    21. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by CecilPL · · Score: 1

      But Mars has gravity that is around a third that of Earth. That's a lot. So a sampling robot would need to land on Mars and then return fighting against the large Martian gravity well. It would probably need to carry its fuel with it which means it would need to have a lot of mass to start with and which would make a safe landing even more difficult. We'll probably have successful sample-return from Mars before a human mission their but the technical difficulty with even a sample-return mission is immense.

      It's not really that much. Delta-V from the surface of Mars to Earth return trajectory is ~8km/sec, which is about double the delta-V from the lunar surface to Earth orbit. Consider the size of the Apollo lander - and that had people in it!

    22. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      What about setting some nano-replicators loose on Phobos and have them build a beanstalk down to Mars?

      Oh, wait, what century is this?

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    23. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As other posters have alluded to, it's definitely possible.

      However, any references to the eagle module require references to the Saturn V. We can't put another lander on the moon of that size (and bring it back) with the rockets we currently have.

    24. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      It does not have to land with the fuel mass. It only has to land with enough mass to get back to orbit. There it can dock to the fuel that brings it back to earth. Like with the mars landings. If you optimize to the sweet spot, you can save a lot.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    25. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Hmm... It requires energy to slow down the spacecraft. Which in the case of Mars goes up in heat in the bit of atmosphere, and stuff and heat propelled out in the case of manual breaking with trusters.
      What if we, instead of throwing that energy away, could just transform it into something storable.
      Then we could create at least a part of our fuel in-place, wouldn’t have to carry it all the way, and kill two birds with one stone.

      I think it’s worth pursuing that idea. Especially for missions to somewhere where there is no large planet/atmosphere to break. Or where the planet is too large to carry all the fuel there.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    26. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by cyn1c77 · · Score: 1

      ... but the technical difficulty with even a sample-return mission is immense.

      Don't make more of it than it is. The energy budget is immense, but it is well within our technological capabilities. Congress is just choosing to spend money elsewhere.

    27. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Or we could wait for another martian meteorite to arrive.

    28. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by blair1q · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The report is due six months or so

      Oh, horseshit.

      I hate when an experiment is performed and nobody says a word on what happened, even from a qualitative view.

      They can at least describe what it looks like. "Grey dirt" would be plenty to hold me for the 6 months it takes to produce a full assay.

    29. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Or we could send a roving waldo with a mass-spectrometer on it, and get months or years' worth of data from tons of samples in an exhaustive, directed survey, instead of waiting an extra two years to have a few pebbles in-hand and no way to examine the rock they were sitting on...

    30. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by stevelinton · · Score: 1

      Yes. And so far that's been the choice, but we could certainly do a lot more analysis of the pebbles back on Earth than anything we could do on Mars. With modern instruments we could come scarily close to listing every atom in the sample by isotope and position.

    31. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by CarpetShark · · Score: 1

      fighting against the large Martian gravity well.

      Your use of "Well" is redundant here. It's obvious that no one should fight Martians badly.

    32. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good plan

      Geesh, I wish I had mod points and I could mod your "Good plan" response up with Insightful or Informative
      How about next time, you just keep quiet. Saying "Good plan" adds nothing to the conversation.

    33. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      I will have to trust your math, as I am certainly not a rocket scientist. It does seem that once you get rid of the human element (life support, food, water, recreation, etc.) you have gotten rid of 90% of your problems. Several people have talked about doing a mission to mars (manned or not) using multiple launch vehicles. It would seem you might as well put the craft that will fly back to earth in orbit only, and the lander having only enough mechanical to get into orbit and dock/load, ie: not needing as much shielding/weight/fuel. That means the return craft only lands once (earth), the rover craft only lands once (Mars), and hopefully we can bring back more than 5kg of rock. We already have a proven rover platform, so if it takes 90 days to collect rock, that wouldn't be such a bad thing, would it? Of course, this all depends on optimum times for launch/land/relaunch for the trip to use the least amount of fuel, even if it takes more time. And of course, 1 million other problems that my better judgement says we *can* overcome.

      Obviously this is something new for us, but what better way to try it than Mars, where the risk might be high, but the payoff is just as high. It is about time we brought back some souvenirs from somewhere that doesn't orbit us.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    34. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by zlexiss · · Score: 2, Funny

      Good plan

    35. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by stevelinton · · Score: 1

      Obvious steps along the road are to practice on the Moon (there are plenty of interesting parts of the surface we've never sampled and we can try as often as we want) and on Phobos and Deimos.

    36. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      I showed that I liked the idea, and it is good enough that I have nothing to add. For me it's enough.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    37. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by blair1q · · Score: 1

      If by "modern" you mean "antique".

      I bet we could automate the process in a portable module that the rover could dump pebbles into from time to time.

    38. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by jafac · · Score: 1

      Another very difficult (but very seldom talked-about) problem of spaceflight, is re-ignition of rocket engines. At-altitude, in space, on another heavenly body. . . one has to count on the propellant being in good condition (not frozen, not aerosolized, not leaked out through a ruptured tank, line, seal or stuck-valve, not gravitationally globbed in the center of the tank). It's not a trivial problem - and launch of a sample-return vehicle from Mars faces a pretty big challenge that we have not yet addressed.

      Some folks have speculated about manufacture of propellant on the martian surface - that's a big huge "if". Solids have their own problems, given the very cold temperatures, the engine could easily be damaged in landing. Hypergolics could freeze, and binary liquid propellants could also freeze. (ie. the tanks would have to have heaters to maintain operating temperature prior to ignition - which isn't unusual, of course). But these are the options, I think, used in landing retros on previous Mars landers, which re-ignite under some of the same conditions.

      The notion of a binary solid/hybrid (like the one used on SpaceShip One) is interesting. (Nitrous Oxide as an oxidant, and rubberized solid fuel). Mechanically, I think, simple and reliable, and lightweight, and probably, enough impulse to get off Mars. (I don't know.)

      Something based on perchlorate chemistry to produce hydrogen peroxide from the martian soil might also be interesting (but I don't know if it would be possible to produce enough quantity in high enough concentration - and that failing; would mean mission-failure). The fact that hydrogen peroxide is relatively simple to fire: you pressurize it, and shoot it out through a platinum catalyst, and it decomposes, burning itself - makes it, in my mind, a more reliable bet, at least mechanically-speaking. The waste product is water and oxygen, so less pollution of the pristine martian environment.

      The main thing going for such a mission, is the very thin martian atmosphere; drag can probably be disregarded in the design of the ascent vehicle. Escape velocity is probably what, like 8500 mph?

      It should bring back two rocks.

      One - to sell to some very rich "sucker". The profit from that sale, will fund the mission. The other rock will go to Science.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    39. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because they weren't full of rocket fuel?

    40. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by nelk · · Score: 1

      We know that large impacts on Mars have transferred material to Earth in the past, and continue to do so. I say we just launch a ton of nukes a Mars and wait for the samples to come to us!

      --
      No keyboard detected. Press F1 to continue.
    41. Re:maybe it's time to enlist the Japanese by CrashandDie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I don't think the joke was clear enough. Better luck next time.

  2. We'll Never Know by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The National Geographic coverage of the news gives some air time to those doubtful that this study will prove definitive.

    3.5 billion years ago is too long ago for us to ever *know* definitively. We won't get to Mars for decades and it would be decades after that before any real "hands on" research could even bring us closer to a "definitive" answer (which will still inly be a best guess).

    1. Re:We'll Never Know by MichaelSmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The National Geographic coverage of the news gives some air time to those doubtful that this study will prove definitive.

      3.5 billion years ago is too long ago for us to ever *know* definitively. We won't get to Mars for decades and it would be decades after that before any real "hands on" research could even bring us closer to a "definitive" answer (which will still inly be a best guess).

      Are you a geologist?

    2. Re:We'll Never Know by TheKidWho · · Score: 2, Funny

      It's going to take us decades to figure out what happened billions of years ago? I don't know about you, but that sounds pretty quick to me.

    3. Re:We'll Never Know by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      Nah, we could date it really easily. There's radioactive carbon dating. Oh, won't work. Well, you can look at the sedimentation layers. Oh, won't work. Well, there's always guesswork. :)

          Really, the dating itself isn't as important as if water was or was not there.

          I'm still biased towards the idea that there was and still is water there. Well, as NASA said, "The way the surface has responded is bizarre. I don't understand it. I don't know anybody on my team who understands it. It looks like mud, but it can't be mud."

          If it looks like mud, and acts like mud, it must be a new state of solid that isn't mud. :) Or it's just dirt and water, despite how they may describe it.

          It's very likely there is an awful lot of water there. As the climate cycles slowed, the water became more stagnant, ending up in rather comfortable resting spots like the ice caps and muddy plains.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    4. Re:We'll Never Know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      No, but I play one on television.

    5. Re:We'll Never Know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, I stayed at a Holiday Inn express last night.

    6. Re:We'll Never Know by camperdave · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's radioactive carbon dating. Oh, won't work. Well, you can look at the sedimentation layers. Oh, won't work. Well, there's always guesswork.

      Carbon dating and sedimentation layer examination are both guesswork. Educated guesswork, possibly even accurate guesswork, but guesswork nonetheless.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    7. Re:We'll Never Know by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          It's fairly educated guesswork though.

          On Earth, we can compare it to known (or estimated) things. The reason I said it wouldn't work on Mars would be, we know nothing about it's history. If (big if) we did find something resembling life, we wouldn't have any way to establish when it happened. Well, we may be able to eventually, but it will be building a timeline from scratch, rather than having centuries of data to work with.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    8. Re:We'll Never Know by polymeris · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nah, we could date it really easily. There's radioactive carbon dating. Oh, won't work. Well, you can look at the sedimentation layers. Oh, won't work. Well, there's always guesswork. :)

      There are other radiometric dating methods besids carbon-14, specially for things that old. One of them is rubidium-strontium (50 billion yeras half life?). It works on inorganic stuff too, although i don't know if it works for martian inorganic stuff, but I'm sure one could adapt it.

      Really, the dating itself isn't as important as if water was or was not there.

      I agree.

    9. Re:We'll Never Know by stevelinton · · Score: 1

      We know something about the cratering history -- for instance if one crater is partly on top of another, we know it formed later, and the extent of "weathering" may give us further information. We can also compare it with the much studied cratering history of the Moon.

    10. Re:We'll Never Know by vlm · · Score: 1

      There's radioactive carbon dating. Oh, won't work.

      I'm curious why you say that. RC dating works because theres a certain believed fixed ratio of carbon isotopes in the air and general environment, and once something dies and is buried the active isotopes start decaying into the stable isotopes. The active isotopes come from cosmic rays and are very optimistically believed to be constant and/or have been correlated on earth with sedimentation and other data.

      Works just fine with inorganic samples. Crush the heck out of some martian rocks and the trapped atmosphere, conveniently mostly carbon containing CO2, and you'll know how long those little bubbles of atmosphere have been trapped in the rock.

      RC dating only works over a certain date range because eventually "almost all" the isotopes have decayed. So, simply try a different atom. Stuff that contains unstable isotopes that crystalizes into chemically pure crystals is pretty convenient because you know it was 100% pure at one time and now is X% decayed whatever.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    11. Re:We'll Never Know by dnahelicase · · Score: 1

      3.5 billion years ago is too long ago for us to ever *know* definitively. We won't get to Mars for decades and it would be decades after that before any real "hands on" research could even bring us closer to a "definitive" answer (which will still inly be a best guess).

      Actually, I *know* because I was there. I'm just over 4 billion years old. Mars was one-third water. We didn't realize that it wasn't enough to support life, as we consumed most of it watering our Martian golf courses. (Which happen to be much larger than earth courses.)

      Once we lost most of the potable water to golf, we started harvesting the oceans. It never seemed a problem, as water was viewed as an "unlimited" and "cheap" resource.

      Well, it turns out if you kill the ocean you kill the planet. Oops. So then we decided to colonize a nearby planet that looked like it was about 2/3 water. It's been going well so far, though the natives occasionally screw things up.

    12. Re:We'll Never Know by KeensMustard · · Score: 1

      We won't get to Mars for decades

      Huh? We've been to Mars several times in the past decade already - we are still there if being in orbit counts as being 'there'.

    13. Re:We'll Never Know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So then we decided to colonize a nearby planet that looked like it was about 2/3 water. It's been going well so far, though the natives occasionally screw things up.

      This citizen is a heretic and an apostate, and should be strung up by his gelsacs and spun about until they form a double helix.
      - K'Breel

    14. Re:We'll Never Know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So, you say you found the bloody glove on the ground. Tell me, do you have any formal training in geology?"

    15. Re:We'll Never Know by dwye · · Score: 1
      H. Beam Piper (or his estate, rather) is going to want his money for poaching his idea. Refuse to pay, and you will end up like Benjamin Bathurst or Calvin Morrison.

      BTW, water used on golf courses automatically recycles (unless you crack the water and use the hydrogen for fusion). Piper's Martian colonists used up Mars in more realistic ways.

  3. Always curious about where the water went by Low+Ranked+Craig · · Score: 3, Informative

    So I finally looked it up. Interesting. http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/mars151.php

    --
    I still cannot find the droids I am looking for...
    1. Re:Always curious about where the water went by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      It is all underground, frozen and waiting for someone to turn the melting reactor on.

    2. Re:Always curious about where the water went by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          It'll be easier to turn it on, with all the mutants with multiple arms (and breasts). And as an added bonus, there'll be some amazingly talented 4 handed piano players.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    3. Re:Always curious about where the water went by RDW · · Score: 1

      Looks like the Martians must have engineered this quite recently:

      "Its air is much more attenuated than ours, its oceans have shrunk until they cover but a third of its surface, and as its slow seasons change huge snowcaps gather and melt about either pole and periodically inundate its temperate zones. That last stage of exhaustion, which to us is still incredibly remote, has become a present-day problem for the inhabitants of Mars."

      - HG Wells, _The War of the Worlds_ [1898]

  4. Not funny by blai · · Score: 1

    We can be like them in 100 years, assuming we get some nuclear bombs going.

    --
    In soviet Russia, God creates you!
    1. Re:Not funny by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      We'd need tons upon tons of nuclear weapons to practically do that though. Earth has an atmosphere where mars does not, evaporating water doesn't go into nothingness but rather back into the atmosphere. Sure if you nuclear-ly fuse H2O into heavier elements it could work, but its way more bombs than would ever be practical to use.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    2. Re:Not funny by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          You never know until you try. Either way, we'll be able to bask in the glow of our new radioactive neighbor for generations. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    3. Re:Not funny by Zocalo · · Score: 4, Informative

      Earth has an atmosphere where mars does not

      Mars has an atmosphere, not much of one to be sure, but it does have one. Why else do you think so many landers used parachutes to help slow their descent?

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    4. Re:Not funny by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 2, Funny

      Those were lovechutes; the good energies radiating from Mother Mars slowed the descent.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    5. Re:Not funny by Weirsbaski · · Score: 1

      Mars has an atmosphere, not much of one to be sure, but it does have one. Why else do you think so many landers used parachutes to help slow their descent?

      Huh. I always thought it was for nasa to get a little extra funding on the side. That way as the native Martians watch the probe descend, they can see a big 'chute (with a big ad on it) pop out too. How else will they know how good Pawtucket Patriot Ale really is?

      --

      I am not a sig.
  5. Google's Mars makes this appear obvious by zdepthcharge · · Score: 0
  6. Intelligent life by owlstead · · Score: 2, Funny

    OK, the ocean has been established. Maybe we can go and look for oil pollution to see if there was intelligent life on mars already?

    1. Re:Intelligent life by Psaakyrn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What sort of intelligent life would cause oil pollution?

    2. Re:Intelligent life by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Nobody's perfect. Sometimes you forget your car keys, sunglasses... Sometimes you set fire to an oil rig. Such is intelligent life.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    3. Re:Intelligent life by delinear · · Score: 1

      I think he meant sentient life. The two don't always go together, as our species is apt to demonstrate.

    4. Re:Intelligent life by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      What if they're intelligent oil eating creatures, who just run out of "food"?

    5. Re:Intelligent life by vlm · · Score: 1

      What if they're intelligent oil eating creatures, who just run out of "food"?

      Isn't that basically modern western civilization right about now, aka peak oil?

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    6. Re:Intelligent life by wesborgmandvm · · Score: 1

      Clearly the global warming from the use of fossil fuels caused the ocean to evaporate.

  7. Re:If the earth is only 6,000 years old... by owlstead · · Score: 2, Funny

    Because it was retroactively made 3.5 billion years old 6000 years ago. Oh ye of little faith.

  8. Once upon a time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Philip K. Dick wrote several short stories about how we lived on Mars and didn't remember to reduce, reuse, recycle, curb our species appetites for violence (war) and sex (overpopulation). So we burned up the oceans when it all went kaboom!. But not before we sent people to live on Earth...

    Now there are "billions and billions" of us. (sigh)

    1. Re:Once upon a time... by vlm · · Score: 1

      curb our species appetites for .... sex (overpopulation)

      We've got great technological solutions for that particular problem, its just the religious lunatics don't like it. Need to go to the root cause, not just list a symptom, which in that case would be religious lunacy. And pretty much all major world religions, except Buddhism, glorify warfare and demonize the victims, so the loons get some blame there too. And pretty much all major world religions glorify the opposite of "reduce", obviously thats how they got to be major world religions instead of some ancient dead sect that no one will remember (think of heavens gate in comparison to the judeo-christian order to go forth and multiply)

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    2. Re:Once upon a time... by ChunderDownunder · · Score: 1

      See also Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles.

    3. Re:Once upon a time... by khallow · · Score: 1

      Since my previous reply was modded down for some reason, maybe my explanation needs to be clearer for the moderators. Phillip K Dick is fiction. Sure there is some tenuous basis in reality, but ultimately it makes no sense to get depressed simply because you read a few very speculative (and wrong, I might add) stories about an imaginary human past. Remember that Dick could bend reality to enforce whatever point of morality he chose to make. He is shoehorning his world and characters into whatever belief systems he happens to believe in and moods he happens to be in on that day.

      Someone makes a grave, preventable mistake that everyone knew was going to happen? Well, that's some basis for feeling down. Something in a Slashdot article reminds you vaguely of a bunch of really depressing stories you read once? No basis for feeling down.

    4. Re:Once upon a time... by teknopurge · · Score: 1

      epic book. Mod parent up.

    5. Re:Once upon a time... by dwye · · Score: 1

      Are you certain that you did not mean H. Beam Piper? Most of his stories are set in a Multiverse built around different probability worlds keeping or losing Martian technology to different extents, then diverging. One time line kept all of the Martian tech, then developed the ability to cross to other lines before completely ruining their Earth, which is how the stories mesh together.

    6. Re:Once upon a time... by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Yeah, billions and billions of hairdressers, tired TV producers, insurance salesmen, personnel officers, security guards, public relations executives, management consultants...

      Apologies to Douglas Adams.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    7. Re:Once upon a time... by blair1q · · Score: 1

      The part about a spacefaring society completely forgetting that it has the ability to make anything more complicated than stone axes is the part that i can't suspend disbelief of.

  9. Well maybe we should just give up then by symbolset · · Score: 1

    Let us claim our place among the fossils with pride, that we did not stoop to such foolishness before the inevitable asteroid took us.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
    1. Re:Well maybe we should just give up then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think we should club together as a planet to fund a giant space laser to write a message across the face of the moon saying "You are not alone ->" and bury a space capsule at the point with data on the entirety of life on Earth. Then we can die out as a race safe in the knowledge that we've done our bit.

  10. Re:If the earth is only 6,000 years old... by TheLink · · Score: 1

    Nah it's just a new virtual instance copied and modified slightly yesterday and God just clicked on the "Start Virtual Universe" button only a few seconds ago.

    So is it 3.5 billion years old or a day old or a few seconds old? :).

    --
  11. Re:If the earth is only 6,000 years old... by JustOK · · Score: 1

    But, when was the Big Boot?

    --
    rewriting history since 2109
  12. Related TED talk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One of the recent TED talks about returning to Mars mentioned this.

    In http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/joel_levine.html (16 minute video) Joel Levine describes how

    * We've found plumes of methane in the Mars atmosphere above some of the coastal and structures mentioned in this article
    * On Earth, over 99.9% of methane is produced by living systems
    * Our next mars mission should not be a lander, but a robotic aerial flyer that can give more precise measurements of methane and other gasses along with improved ground images
    * Results from such a mission could be used to pinpoint with much higher confidence an appropriate location to send a followup lander for sample collection

    1. Re:Related TED talk by butalearner · · Score: 1

      Well the Mars Science Lab (another rover) has been in the works for a while, so that's still a go. Then, sticking to the lander-orbiter-lander-orbiter schedule, the MAVEN orbiter is next. Both are equipped to provide some detail on the methane, but now NASA actually wants to send a dedicated orbiter for that.

      Also of interest, there are several mission proposals summarized here. Two of them are UAV missions, including KittyHawk (a proposal that has lost several times, first proposed for a mission in 2003 for the centennial of the Wright Brothers' first flight) and ARES (how original!).

  13. Throxeus by dugeen · · Score: 1

    Where mighty Throxeus once rolled, now there is only the ochre moss of the dead sea bottom. Oh bugger my flyer's crashing AGAIN, I really am going to speak to the maintenance guys when I eventually fight my way back to Helium

    1. Re:Throxeus by AGMW · · Score: 1

      Where mighty Throxeus once rolled, now there is only the ochre moss of the dead sea bottom. Oh bugger my flyer's crashing AGAIN, I really am going to speak to the maintenance guys when I eventually fight my way back to Helium

      Is it only me that read that in an oddly high pitched voice?

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
  14. other findings Linked to Mars Oceans..... by nerdpocalypse · · Score: 1

    and they've found evidence of a deep water drilling that seems to have occurred about the time when the water started decreasing......

  15. It's possible... by ElusiveJoe · · Score: 1

    ...that Mars was covered by a chocolate ocean with marshmallow fish in it.Where do I collect money for my research?

    1. Re:It's possible... by maxume · · Score: 1

      Why do you think that coming up with the wacky idea is the valuable part? The valuable part is writing a reasonable sounding grant proposal based on the wacky idea.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  16. Re:If the earth is only 6,000 years old... by kstahmer · · Score: 1

    The Earth is 6,000 years old, flat, in the center of the Universe and is orbited by the Sun, Moon, planets & stars. Ptolemy is right, Copernicus wrong. Dinosaurs are a lie, fossils are a lie, evolution is a lie, paleoanthropology is a lie, evolutionary genetics is a lie, carbon-14 dating is a lie, continental drift is a lie and geologic deep time is a lie. Young Earth Creationists are right; Charles Darwin, Gregor Mendel and James Hutton wrong. With all that acceptance and suspension of belief, why is it so difficult to believe that Mars is at least 3.5 billion years old? When scientific observation & experiment and deductive reasoning are thrown out the window, anything is possible. An infinite number of angels can dance on a head of a pin.

    --
    HRH The Duke of Windsor
  17. Another theory where it went... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mars did indeed once have a large ocean.

    It also once had a highly elliptical orbit which crossed Earth's orbit.

    Earth's Moon is believed to have been created by a collision between Earth and a Mars-sized planetary body, which caused a large ejection of rocky mass that coalesced into the new satellite in a relatively close circular orbit.

    Mars was actually the colliding planetary body.

    The collision knocked Mars into what has become it's current, more circular orbit and also during the impact, Mars' ocean water was also cast off into space where it froze into ice crystals that were eventually captured by Earth's gravity and the ice orbited for a astronomically long time before the orbit finally decayed and the ice fell into the Earth's atmosphere where it melted on entry and rained a huge amount on a planet-wide scale for a long time. This rain was the "Great Deluge" or "Noah's Flood" or whatever you'd want to call it.

    In the end, the answer to "Where did Mars' ocean go?" is that most of it is now in our oceans.

  18. Am I the only one who's thought this.. by holytorture · · Score: 1

    Maybe the earth and mars were one planet(AKA "Pangea") about 3.5 billion years ago when a giant asteroid(AKA the moon) hit "Pangea" and knocked the mars part back. Thus our continents started shifting again, and the dinosaurs could no longer survive with a smaller planet. It would then make sense that America accidentally gave New Zeland a chunk of fossilized wood brought back from the moon. It could also explain our planet's weird rotation and why the moon doesn't rotate while it orbits us.

  19. Re:If the earth is only 6,000 years old... by tibit · · Score: 1

    While this line of thinking always makes me chuckle, even if it were true it doesn't matter at all. Yeah, I get your joke.

    But seriously, so what that the Universe was made 6000 years ago if it acts like it was made 13.75 billion years ago (not 3.5, duh)?

    The arbitrary "young" age of our "old" Universe, namely 6000 years or WTH other number someone posits, has zero value. It does not let us predict anything, it matches no observations, it's merely an idol. The age of Universe as currently estimated by scientific method lets us predict things about said Universe -- it's not merely an idol, it has real uses and can be verified and further corrected as our knowledge expands.

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  20. Re:If the earth is only 6,000 years old... by tibit · · Score: 1

    I guess I forgot to add that obviously it's all about how good a theory is, and a theory is only as good as its predictive power. I have zero problems with even the most "crackpot" theories (time cube, anyone?), as long as they would be of some use. But the problem is that crackpot theories (including young Earth) are absolutely useless: they predict nothing, they are merely shrines for grandstanding. The people who propose many of those theories somehow expect "serious" scientists to take their work and put it to use: they missed the crux of the matter here -- it's their job to show that a theory is of some use first...

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  21. Re:If the earth is only 6,000 years old... by tibit · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I just realized your 3.5by was in reference to Earth's age estimate, not that for Universe.

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  22. Re:Are you the only one who's thought this.. by SpeZek · · Score: 1

    Yes.

  23. It's hee-eeere by blair1q · · Score: 1

    If there was that much water on Mars, and now it's not, then it likely went out into space with the solar wind. Which means some of it will have fallen to Earth.

  24. drilling for oil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Drill baby Drill was the martian mantra and look where it got them and the venusians

  25. Of course Mars had water by uncoveror · · Score: 1

    We have known that Mars used to have water since the Viking probe in the '70s, and that the martians had to go underground. Why are they pretending this is not old news?

    --
    The Uncoveror: It's the real news.