Monday, March 8, 2010

The Sands of Mars

Mars photos from NASA APOD.

You must ENLARGE these photos to maximize awesomeness.


Thawing sand dunes:



Barchan sand dunes blown by the wind take a liquid aspect:



Landslides of black sand create the impression of a surreal forest of ebony yucca trees:



This crater, the Echus Chasma, is hypothesized to have been one of the major water sources on Mars. These cliffs are ~4km high and were possibly carved out by running water. At one time this may have been the greatest waterfall in the solar system:



Martian landscape marked by mysterious streaks of black sand:



Strange white finger-like rock formations revealed at the bottom of an impact crater:



Avalanche:



A weird 150m-wide pit in the side of a volcano. Infrared thermal signatures suggest this is a very deep hole leading to an underground cavern system. Several of these pits have been identified:



3 comments:

  1. 150 meters? That'll just fit onto my graph paper...

    ReplyDelete
  2. @Jeff
    Yes, the eerie image of the entrance to the Martian Caverns greatly stimulates one's imaginings.

    ReplyDelete

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