Ocean on Mars may have produced alien lifeforms
Scientists believe it stretched around the planet’s northern hemisphere and held 10 times less water than all the Earth’s oceans combined.
It may also have provided a cradle for the emergence of extraterrestrial life.
Scientists have long debated whether oceans, seas lakes or rivers existing on Mars long ago.
Satellite images reveal features on the planet resembling river valleys and flood plains created by flowing water. However, there are alternative explanations for their formation, such as volcanic activity.
The research, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, provides the best evidence yet an enormous ocean once existed on Mars. Scientists from the University of Colorado at Boulder, US, based their findings on a study of what appear to be ancient river delta deposits and valley networks.
They identified 52 delta regions fed by numerous river-like systems. All lay at about the same height, suggesting they marked the shoreline edge of a huge river-fed ocean.
The researchers, led by Dr Gaetano Di Achille and Professor Brian Hynek, believe the ocean covered around 36% of the planet and contained 30 million cubic miles of water.
They wrote: “Our findings suggest an ocean formed on Mars as part of a global hydrosphere.”
Another study led by Prof Hynek and reported in the Journal of Geophysical Research – Planets identified roughly 40,000 river valleys on Mars.
A key unanswered question is: where did all the water on Mars go?
Some scientists believe much of it may remain frozen underground.
River delta sediments on Earth rapidly cover up organic carbon and other biomarkers of life. For this reason, Martian delta systems are likely to be key targets for future exploration.




