Body of Water Beneath Surface of Mars
Body of Water Beneath Surface of Mars
27th July, 2018
Yesterday I saw a headline regarding the detection or possible detection of a body of water beneath the surface. There’s no question that Mars had an enormous amount of water on it long ago. (Would have been amazing to see in some respects).
So, it is more likely than not that there would be some water remnants beneath the surface of planet Mars. All planets (all going well of course) produce water.
Any ice that we observe in space could only have originally come from a planet. Analysis of the ice and what it contains will tell us at what point it became ice and we could in fact make general groupings of the ice we observe in our solar system.
By Fiona MacLeodⓒ
There is no happiness there are only moments of happiness.
ldJYwjRFC
OtyFTSCDU
kTljpOeoIR
zVpmLIFru
QlDXcPBvJubywITr
VKqiNkbJPmOWuYT
gxyHqPcdVNQsZ
SwTbFKnqBJmL
Some genuinely nice and useful info on this internet site brunette.pro, besides I believe the pattern has got good features.
Our solar system consists of 90 per cent water ice. What planet does your imagination have all that ice coming from?
Hi
Before ice can be ice, it has to be water and water cannot form in space. (With the exception of water geysers due to an encapsulated heat source. Water is forming in space in that regard but it isn’t being created)
There is evidence in our solar system of a catastrophic impact to a planet that once was. An impact that would have hurled the oceans from it including its ice glaciers and poles. The impact caused the planet to shatter and The internal of that planet was no longer encapsulated.
Much of the planet’s remnants are in the asteroid belts and it may have happened previously, ie. another planet may have been impacted in a similar way, but much earlier on in the life of our solar system.
by Fiona MacLeod (c)