Skip to main content

A river runs through it: NASA finds evidence of running water on Mars

NASA hinted this weekend that its team of scientists has solved a major mystery surrounding Mars. Today, the space agency announced that Mars does in fact have seasonal rivers of flowing water, increasing the odds that the planet can sustain some forms of life.  The evidence, published in Nature Geoscience , suggests this water activity is still in existence and not a remnant from the past history of the planet.

The scientists were looking at recurring slope lineae that appear and increase during the warm season, where temperatures can reach as high as 300 Kelvin. These slope lineae appear as long dark streaks, some as long as a football field, on the Martian landscape. Scientists long have speculated the lineae were formed by water, but there was no evidence to support this claim until now.

Recommended Videos

Using an imaging spectrometer on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), scientists studying these slope lineae found evidence that suggest the presence of hydrated salts where the slope lineae are at their largest. This correlation suggests flowing water is responsible for their creation and expansion. According to this model, water flows from the canyons and crater walls during the warmer summer months, likely a shallow subsurface flow of briny water that deposits hydrated salts and stains the area. Scientists are not sure where the water originates, but it may rise up from underground sources or condense from the atmosphere like a rain.

Liquid is key to life on Mars and increases the odds that the planet may contain some form of life. Running water also may play an important role in the future colonization of the planet.

“It seems that the more we study Mars, the more we learn how life could be supported and where there are resources to support life in the future,” said Michael Meyer , lead scientist for NASA’s Mars Exploration Program.

Kelly Hodgkins
Kelly's been writing online for ten years, working at Gizmodo, TUAW, and BGR among others. Living near the White Mountains of…
NASA to shut Spot the Station site. Here’s how you can still track the ISS
The International Space Station.

Did you know that on a clear night, it’s possible to see the International Space Station (ISS) when it passes overhead? Sunlight reflecting off the habitable satellite causes it to shine brightly as it orbits Earth some 250 miles up, making it easy to spot.

For many years now, NASA has operated a service that lets you sign up for text message and email notifications that are sent out shortly before the ISS passes within sight of your registered location. Depending on its path across the sky, the station could remain visible for as long as six minutes, giving you plenty of time to gaze upward and marvel at the fact that humans are living and working aboard the distant, orbital outpost.

Read more
NASA rover shares moody image of Mars moon Deimos
Mars' Deimos moon, captured by NASA's Perseverance rover.

Once in a while, you might look up and marvel at magnificent views of our moon, its surface dramatically lit by our sun's light. But have you ever paused to wonder what other moons might look like from the surfaces of other planets in our solar system?

NASA’s Perseverance rover, which has been exploring Mars since arriving there in dramatic fashion in 2021, has just shared an exquisite image of Deimos, one of the red planet’s two moons.

Read more
Marvel at Mars’ ancient landscape, captured by Curiosity
Mars ancient landscape.

With its hills and distant mountains, the landscape seems somehow familiar yet at the same time eerily alien.

The striking image was captured just recently by NASA’s Curiosity rover as it continues its years-long exploration of Mars.

Read more