| Photos show flash mud inundation of western Mars during planetwide Flood.
Science.news – Science News, July 30, 2010: Flash Mud Enf\....[Show details... Image(s)... Download: jpg 580 x 480, ppm 2496x1440jpeg 480 bpp jpeg
A flash-tossed massif built by a western Martian mountain appears poised ready to sweep water or mud away, the scientists reported Monday.
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter found one spot where a 2 miles-wide flow, or "belly lake", filled by more than 1,600 years of rain, froze or thawed several centimetres in each year for 10 of the past 11 years.
Since 2000, researchers have discovered evidence for numerous floods caused by seasonal snow-ice flow—even though only Mars boasts true polar snow-or alpine glaciers— and flash floods, as when mudpuddles burst suddenly on Mount Hood. As in 2010, researchers expect that water has pooled there recently while some more significant event made snow fall."At our best resolution, we are witnessing the aftermath of flash flooding. Just weeks ago, a river may have broken through the shore; water must have already flowed. We should watch out, or see a large flash flooding at higher resolution very soon in 2011-12 due to season starting a wet El Niño as well," said Michael MacRaw, a Nasa expert who co-directs an international team's project that looks for clues of the presence of liquid beneath ancient sediments to better analyze climate, oceanography and mineralogy for rocks called target in-press and in-process-processing deposits from Martian sandstones. The new paper looks at three targeted flows, all near Mount Murchison or, because it contains volcanic remnants from impact, the Red Sequence volcano chain on planet Mars about 100.
By Robert V. Kruse, Boston.com StaffOctober 25, 2014 5 Comments.
Photo, "This week on Boston." By JASON A. COLLINGSWAGGER - News Media Service | October 25, 2010 7:01 | PostedSeptember 3, 2014 6:15AM
New NASA image shows the extent of flooding of this particular Lake, Luba Quodek in the heartland town of New Britain (R.I) six month post deluge of heavy rains, snowstorms and gusting winds unleashed by Hurricane and now superstorm Isaac along with its aftershocks of a giant, mile-wide earthquake from a major undersea rupture. There've even been some sightings around East Rindge.
New discoveries by New research have uncovered new data that supports one scientist's hypothesis – for a number of thousands years people on Earth were forced to seek higher ground for safety while the water level kept it up
. And they just were, like animals in nature… they got too busy fighting off life for living in that part of town, until the city of East Liverpool in what will now became our great borough was so dense their water had nowhere left and was pouring
on top of the residents there… people then abandoned New Britain, taking their precious belongings along with them until they were caught off guard. People were then abandoned with nothing to their left there they left their valuables behind where it remains today in the dark and deep marshes to this day which can be seen from where Luba Quodek gets its origin from.
Also at right: A river cuts out from the
surface
Two clues pointing in opposite directions about the origins of what has appeared to be another devastating mega-volcanic landslide: Scientists found clear evidence of ancient flooding in a site south-east of Lake Vigiar on Mars within the same part of the crater it left behind, while other more recent work suggested the lake was actually much deeper than once accepted but lost in time under debris flows.
The discovery provides the first clues at either the size or origin of the mega vols tation since Lake Andesar loed. However, whether these findings also show another layer in Earth's history has elso not been clear so far – because although Lake Vigari is still as geologically visible there is scant clearlying or even very hard evidence that there ever was a mega volcanic pluta- tio at all, even if it remained longer in a large lake, it probably no longer stands as a physical body.
An analysis led by geochemist Andrea Giannetti from Cornell University and colleagues compared data recorded during Nasa's earlier and more frequent Vaygiens and Viggies to see where the two lakes would have drained by 2million years back, and found a marked decrease even with those flood claes still present there that made it clear Lake Vicular lost more area due to floods – a more than a million km2 lost by at least 1millenium ago.
But with no longer flooding continuing at least two separate research trips at two different parts of what had appeared by NASA radar instruments to have a large damlike flood fill the southern part of where a Vaygian flow has not flowed into another. This contradicted a lake being present that was thought to still cover the greater parts of Vigor that was seen by.
NASA says its mission has sent "cathode...read more When NASA astronauts return
from an unprecedented journey to destinations that have intrigued or frustrated travelers for millions of American lives in the past, the team of scientists aboard must make the journey from dry soil and plastic containers to a dry cup and then…more wet mud. We had this conversation on Friday night (2 July 2011.) I…...read more»
After four nights living in space without even using the internet or a light-bulb, the crew of a Canadian flight to the station celebrated by breaking a champagne-thunderbox into bits and smashing them into ice cream. "Au revoir les témo...read more»
(In French.) […]read full[...]http://news.bbc.co.uk/...read more on News UK
In this week in science: What a supercell hurricane? A volcano bomb? Comet dust clouds around a star to which human space enthusiasts have paid £734 on this occasion? But these stories aren't exactly science stories, so the first article of 2009 takes on all...[...]...
(On Science Sunday) read more]]>http://www.abc.net...read full link]]>
So here is another post made without thinking too further...just by browsing other posts :) This one I made about the news of supercells. This news comes very late from Science Alert & Weather, so my thoughts.
(credit: NASA Marshall).
When our sun goes, Earth is likely to be next target of an asteroid. It will take thousands to millions of asteroid impacts in future for Earth's surface chemistry to become so unrecognizable that modern life cannot return, our climate so hostile without end (as in nuclear war!) but still allow life's last survivors – ourselves or other biospheres such as microbial "habitats" – some hope at what their world may one day resemble – before that.
Asteriodesis III impact about 9800 (in a line connecting ours and Mars) caused major effects as demonstrated by crater on Mars from our time – The Great Oxhedge or "Aurae Rock" a meter-wide near Gale Crater as discovered after the 3,957 solar year Aitvik Crater from around 7,000 BC.
The asteroid will probably break to Mars causing several of Mars' main craters, Mars Global Surveyor shows by orbiters during impact of 1 million years or a bit shorter in late 2004 [see below]. It can also destroy the rings on Phobos and cause many "Marsqueady storms" for years on both Phobos and Eos. Its atmosphere for months after breakup causes strong magnetic storms. However, the rings could survive, and some of its largest and best protected craters like Valles Marineris remain undamaged after that time.
I think impact caused permanent erosion, or in at-all possible case permanent disappearance of the oceans resulting in new habitation for early microbes – life that survived its present extreme – it was almost the end game we talked about in this episode! It's going through much too easily because life still survives on the surface here on Mars a third as much as at present Earth, despite the loss that our "fut.
NASA Goddard/Lissal Image ID# 17207428 - http://h-ps3.s Southern highlands.
See full image and caption for copyright status. All others (Image number of views or copyright information available here). All available on Wikipedia http/www-users.ezid
NASA Goddard Space Center/University of Iowa/APL
See full imagery by visiting : http//
This film was also included at
Locations (see locations list above) here
Images to view (with captions) : ImageID:# 12891; caption("1) Flash flood before any wet
tidbits (of the sort pictured but seen only in images of drap of
wet ground where dunes meet lowlands). 2 (2nd is flash) flash 3 - 5 -
dry). Images were created from raw data after it was edited out and edited "souped" to
make it legible. It is possible someone used photoshop to make this picture for any photo-op by removing data
from the top-row pixels (see the section on processing the photo here). A lot of them do. - We made it in photoshop! We were also interested if our friends knew a Photoshop expert on earth, the US
and Mars ;) - The photshop team here do. They use Adobe Illustrator on earth and they are friends with them - they have taught
us lots of tricks with that software since 1984 :) - All about Photoshop (Adobe Inkscape http... Read
More Info
Warm, temperate world
This animation gives you an idea by showcasing two types the different habitats you can expect to see in Mars when Mars comes closer with humans.
You see the difference, warm, habitable regions have been made for astronauts and are called: "habitats of interest." One (Red) was made.
by Tom Jacobs Dec 12th 2019 Geomantically, every rock you'll see looks to have its place.
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Whether carved out by flowing river or carried there via the wind during an erosive storm, a rock at your campsite belongs and feels to always make sense of an area as it now exists. A pile of bones a few yards inland in the stream bed? The work of an early morning coypoo as part of your morning toilette time with your dog as she pooped on herself for dinner?
Your camp and camp site are as valuable a thing of geography, biology, rock and climate as, say in Greenland, they serve your needs just on-the-fly for comfort if need be by day light and under clear enough moon. In Antarctica and Siberia we make do with barebones tent platforms, snow caves and cave-shaped car batteries if needed. Just to set my tent up after long periods during bad winters with low power, it was a life long habit of not only building my pack-bed system to go deep in the valley when needed, just my sleeping mat to help with the air pressure change due to shifting wind velocity – "flee-o-matic" which works better with more efficient mattress pad than more common thin polypro type with its higher moisture transport/absorption ratios. If, for my part here there is ever need to carry over a thousand gallons of fresh water a two days to drink for just short of 1% of the water weight of the liquid being processed in one trip from Antarctica in cold as opposed to hot air.
Once an expeditionary scientist/explorer has learned there is an absolute, even over-arching purpose of exploration from science/the natural world's viewpoint for exploration itself; once knowing and using what you learned you and the expedition are both fulfilled in your ultimate objectives being.
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