Someone alert Ziggy Stardust, there appear to be spiders on Mars.
Strange black objects seen from 200 miles above the surface of Mars
are generating interest and speculation that the unidentified objects
could be anything from geysers to sunbathing colonies of microorganisms.
NPR
presents several photos of the objects, including one taken by the Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter on Jan. 27, 2010, that appears to show "little
black flecks dotting the ridges, mostly on the sunny side, like
sunbathing spiders sitting in rows."
The objects were first spotted in 1998. Interestingly, they appear
when the surface of Mars begins to warm, showing up in the same location
most of the time. And then when the Martian winter approaches, they
disappear with the same precise regularity. The images have been brought
into greater detail by Michael Benson in his book "Planetfall: New Solar System Visions."
Most scientists, including teams from the U.S. Geological Survey,
Hungary and the European Space Agency, have their own theories, but the
leading explanation is that the objects are geysers of CO2 exploding
from underneath the planet's surface.
"If you were there, you'd be standing on a slab of carbon dioxide
ice," Phil Christensen of Arizona State University told NPR. "All around
you, roaring jets of carbon dioxide gas are throwing sand and dust a
couple hundred feet into the air. The ground below would be rumbling.
You'd feel it in your space boots."
And while the geyser theory is the most popular explanation, it has yet to be verified.
In the meantime, there are some interesting alternative theories,
including one from a group of Hungarian scientists, who have speculated
that the objects are actually colonies of photosynthetic Martian
microorganisms that emerge each year to sunbathe in the warm weather.
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