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said University of Arizona planetary geologist James M. Dohm, who led the international investigation.
We compared Gamma Ray Spectrometer data on potassium, thorium and iron above and below a shoreline believed to mark an ancient ocean that covered a third of Mars' surface, and an inner shoreline believed to mark a younger, smaller ocean,
Dohm said.
Our investigation posed the question, Might we see a greater concentration of these elements within the ancient shorelines because water and rock containing the elements moved from the highlands to the lowlands, where they eventually ponded as large water bodies?
When exposed to cosmic rays (charged particles in space that come from the stars, including our sun), chemical elements in soils and rocks emit uniquely identifiable signatures of energy in the form of gamma rays. The gamma ray spectrometer looks at these signatures, or energies, coming from the elements present in the Martian soil.
By measuring gamma rays coming from the martian surface, it is possible to calculate how abundant various elements are and how they are distributed around the planet's surface. Gamma rays, emitted from the nuclei of atoms, show up as sharp emission lines on the instrument's spectrum. While the energy represented in these emissions determines which elements are present, the intensity of the spectrum reveals the elements concentrations. The spectrometer has added significantly to the growing understanding of the origin and evolution of Mars and the processes shaping it today and in the past.
How are gamma rays and neutrons produced by cosmic rays? Incoming cosmic rays--some of the highest-energy particles--collide with atoms in the soil. When atoms are hit with such energy, neutrons are released, which scatter and collide with other atoms. The atoms get " excited" in the process, and emit gamma rays to release the extra energy so they can return to their normal rest state. Some elements like potassium, uranium, and thorium are naturally radioactive and give
off gamma rays as they decay, but all elements can be excited by collisions with cosmic rays to produce gamma rays. The HEND
and Neutron Spectrometers on GRS directly detect scattered neutrons, and the Gamma Sensor detects the gamma rays.
"At some point in the planet's history, a major shift of mass caused the pole to wander about 50 degrees towards its current location and the resulting change in orientation dramatically warped the topography and the ancient shorelines," Professor Mitrovica said.
One critical piece of evidence in support of this hypothesis is the position of the immense Tharsis volcano on Mars - the biggest in the Solar System and some 10,000 times bigger than Mauna Loa, the biggest volcano on Earth. Tharsis is so massive that it will always reorient itself to sit on the planet's equator - it will be spun out to the widest point on the axis of spin, just like a centrifuge. The scientists found that their assessment of how the position of the Martian poles has moved matches precisely the movements of Tharsis as it keeps shifting to maintain its place on the changing position of the equator.
"The chances of this happening randomly are less than 1 in 10,000," Professor Mitrovica said.
As yet the scientists do not understand why the spin axis of Mars moved so much. It may have resulted from a massive deluge of water on the Martian surface resulting in the first Arabia shoreline. The shift in weight caused the planet to tilt on its axis. Once the water disappeared, the pole could have shifted back, then shifted again as a second deluge created the Deuteronilus shoreline. "What we don't know is what caused the poles to shift on Mars and what happened to the water. The ocean may have been gradually converted into water vapour, moved to higher elevations, and flowed beneath the surface. There could be a large mass of water deep within Mars," Dr Perron said.
.......
Water does not make life obligatory, but it does make it far more likely. As yet the only direct evidence for life on Mars has been highly controversial. Ten years ago, Nasa scientists announced that they had found possible signs of life on a Martian meteorite called ALH84001. The potato-sized lump of rock fell to Earth 13,000 years ago and a detailed analysis threw up chemical signatures of life, as well as rod-shaped structures that looked like terrestrial bacteria, but smaller.
Other scientists have been bitterly critical of this analysis, which has gone through a series of claims and counterclaims concerning its authenticity. The only way of truly solving this problem is to look for a similar piece of rock on Mars and bring it back to Earth for analysis. And the best place to find Martian fossils is in sedimentary rock formed by an ocean. At least scientists looking for life on Mars now have a better idea where to find it.