Meteorites Help Reveal How Mars Lost Its Water

Mars, north pole, water, ice
The north pole of Mars according to Mars Global Surveyor data.
(Image credit: NASA via wikicommons | http://bit.ly/1g7EUV2)

(ISNS) -- Mars was once a wetter world, and according to a growing body of evidence, could have had water gushing through rivers, pooling in lakes and possibly even oceans. But the water somehow vanished, leaving behind the parched planet it is today.

Now, a new analysis of Martian meteorites is helping to reveal the history of Martian water, suggesting that large amounts of water escaped into space within the first half-billion years of Mars' existence. Most of the remaining water -- as much as one tenth of the Earth's oceans -- then froze, forming vast, yet-to-be-discovered reservoirs of ice still hidden below the surface.

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