http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap060406.html
The bright soil is indeed unusual. It looks almost like the soil was pushed up from underneath.
Orin
unusal bright soil on mars 4/6/06
- orin stepanek
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- Location: Nebraska
what ever happened to Lot's wife?
Where I live here in Nevada, there is a similar looking salt that will migrate up to the surface after the winter moisture dries in the spring. The summer wind storms blow it away, and that is why our noses bleed at that time of year (unless you get used to it), all that alkalai in the air.
This area was once the Lohantan Sea, and when it left long ago, a several inch thick salt layer is under the soil several feet down, the ensueing years covered it over with silt etc, at the very bottom of the valleys that is. Anything on the higher hills was eroded off. When I backhoed the trenches for the utility lines at my place here, and dug the basement for the pressure tank for the water system so it wouldn't freeze in the winter time and I wouldn't have to heat it, the salt layers were 5' to 6' down and varied from 8" thick and unbreakable to nonexistant, and averaged 3-4" thick and quite hard. A sort of amalgum of a salty stuff and the natural soil. I figure it is the ancient seabed, in the pooling low spots where it finally finished evaporating, after some geological events caused the land to rise (when the Sierra Nevada mountains were formed) and the Sea to drain out, most likely down towards Baja California. I also wonder if the drainout was what caused the Grand Canyon to form. As the Colorado River might have needed some help in that one spot.
The salty white powder shows up every spring in a splochy way all over the lowest valley areas.
This area was once the Lohantan Sea, and when it left long ago, a several inch thick salt layer is under the soil several feet down, the ensueing years covered it over with silt etc, at the very bottom of the valleys that is. Anything on the higher hills was eroded off. When I backhoed the trenches for the utility lines at my place here, and dug the basement for the pressure tank for the water system so it wouldn't freeze in the winter time and I wouldn't have to heat it, the salt layers were 5' to 6' down and varied from 8" thick and unbreakable to nonexistant, and averaged 3-4" thick and quite hard. A sort of amalgum of a salty stuff and the natural soil. I figure it is the ancient seabed, in the pooling low spots where it finally finished evaporating, after some geological events caused the land to rise (when the Sierra Nevada mountains were formed) and the Sea to drain out, most likely down towards Baja California. I also wonder if the drainout was what caused the Grand Canyon to form. As the Colorado River might have needed some help in that one spot.
The salty white powder shows up every spring in a splochy way all over the lowest valley areas.
- orin stepanek
- Plutopian
- Posts: 8200
- Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2005 3:41 pm
- Location: Nebraska
Undoubtedly, silt and salt. Mars seem to have more than meets the eye. How did it get to lose all the water?
Is it possible that in earlier years, when the sun shone more brightly, the earth was like how Venus is now and Mars was like how earth is?
What was that movie? - the mission to Mars. Mars exploration needs more than a rover.
Is it possible that in earlier years, when the sun shone more brightly, the earth was like how Venus is now and Mars was like how earth is?
What was that movie? - the mission to Mars. Mars exploration needs more than a rover.
The Universe Is What You Think It Is. Every Thought Ever Thought Is True.