Mysterious Clay Mounds on Mars Were Formed by Ancient Water, Says New British Study (Photos)

A new British study reveals the mysterious mounds found on Mars were formed by ancient water.
Thousands of mounds and hills in the Red Planet’s barren northern plains are full of clay minerals, providing evidence that the rocks here were once soaked with water.
These mounds are all that is left of a landscape, roughly the size of the UK, that has been almost entirely eroded away, according to the study funded by the UK Space Agency.
Dr. Joe McNeil, a researcher at London’s Natural History Museum, along with collaborators at The Open University used high-resolution images and compositional data captured by Mars orbiters to understand the geology of the mounds.
The team discovered that the mounds, which are up to one-third of a mile high (.5 kilometer), are the remnants of ancient highlands which retreated by hundreds of kilometers after erosion wore away the terrain billions of years ago.
These actions played a key role in shaping the Martian landscape which divides the planet’s low-lying northern hemisphere from its higher-elevation southern hemisphere.

The mounds are made of layered deposits containing clay minerals, formed through water interacting with rock over millions of years.
These clay layers are sandwiched between older, non-clay layers below and younger, non-clay layers above, marking distinct geological events in Mars’ history.

“These mounds are incredibly exciting because they preserve the complete history of water in this region within accessible, continuous rocky outcrops,” said Dr. McNeil.
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“They are a prime location for future missions aimed at uncovering whether Mars ever had an ocean and whether life could have existed there.”
The study also reveals that the mounds are geologically linked to the nearby plains of Oxia Planum, where the European Space Agency’s Rosalind Franklin rover is departing to in 2028—looking for signs of past and present life.
By piecing together Mars’ ancient past, scientists are uncovering the story of a planet that may have once been capable of supporting life.
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“Mars is a model for what the early Earth might have looked like, as its lack of plate tectonics means that much of its ancient geology is still in place,” McNeil continued. “As more missions visit the red planet, the more we’ll be able to dig into our own planet’s history to work out how life began.”
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