ESA probe beams unveils Mars landscape shaped by water, wind and ice
Lying at the boundary of the northern and southern hemisphere, the region is an example of past activity on the planet.

Mars is a planet of two halves. In places, the northern hemisphere of the planet sits a full few kilometres lower than the southern; this clear topographic split is known as the martian dichotomy, and is an especially distinctive feature on the Red Planet's surface.
Northern Mars also displays large areas of smooth land, whereas the planet's southern regions are heavily pockmarked and scattered with craters.
This is thought to be the result of past volcanic activity, which has resurfaced parts of Mars to create smooth plains in the north - and left other regions ancient and untouched.
The furrowed, rock-filled escarpment known as Nili Fossae, sits at the boundary of this north-south divide, researchers said.
Shaping the surface of #Mars with water, wind and ice - a view of a furrowed, rock-filled escarpment known as Nili… https://t.co/uy9khzqFZE
— ESA (@esa) 1542883913000As with much of the surrounding environment, and despite Mars' reputation as a dry, arid world today, water is believed to have played a key role in sculpting Nili Fossae via ongoing erosion.
In addition to visual cues, signs of past interaction with water have been spotted in the western (upper) part of this image -- instruments such as Mars Express' OMEGA spectrometer have spotted clay minerals here, which are key indicators that water was once present.
The elevation of Nili Fossae and surroundings, shown in the topographic view above, is somewhat varied; regions to the left and lower left (south) sit higher than those to the other side of the frame (north), illustrating the aforementioned dichotomy.
This split is thought to be the result of material moving around on Mars hundreds of millions of years ago. Similar to glaciers on Earth, flows of water and ice cut through the martian terrain and slowly sculpted and eroded it over time, also carrying material along with them.
The shapes and structures scattered throughout this image are thought to have been shaped over time by flows of not only water and ice, but also wind.
Examples can be seen in this image in patches of the surface that appear to be notably dark against the ochre background, as if smudged with charcoal or ink.
These are areas of darker volcanic sand, which have been transported and deposited by present-day martian winds. Wind moves sand and dust around often on Mars' surface, creating rippling dune fields across the planet and forming multi-coloured, patchy terrain like Nili Fossae.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.