New Research Reveals Water-Rich Mineral May Explain Mars' Red Color
- Mars' red color comes from ferrihydrite, an iron oxide that forms with water, challenging previous beliefs it was due to hematite.
- The study, published in Nature Communications, indicates Mars had wet conditions in its early history, contradicting the notion of a completely dry planet.
- The presence of ferrihydrite suggests conditions required for water and oxygen interaction with iron.
- NASA emphasized the study's implications for understanding Mars' potentially habitable past and the need for continued research on the planet.
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Ancient Martian Beaches Detected by Chinese Rover
WASHINGTON (Reuters) — Ground-penetrating radar data obtained by China’s Zhurong rover has revealed buried beneath the Martian surface evidence of what look like sandy beaches from the shoreline of a large ocean that may have existed long ago on the northern plains of Mars.
·Japan
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Leaning Left11Leaning Right9Center22Last UpdatedBias Distribution52% Center
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R 21%
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