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Giant crater explains strange shape of Mars

Wed Jun 25, 2008 9:50pm EDT
 
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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A giant crater made by an asteroid or comet explains why Mars is so lopsided, with a basin on one hemisphere and high terrain on the other, three separate teams of scientists said on Wednesday.

The impact gouged out a hole 5,200 miles across and 6,500 miles long -- the size of the combined areas of Asia, Europe and Australia, the researchers reported in the journal Nature.

It would be the largest impact yet found in the solar system.

The three studies describe the true size of the depression, sometimes called the Borealis Basin. Some of the edges have been erased by volcanic activity, they said.

It appears to have held an ocean in the early days of the planet, before Mars lost so much of its atmosphere and the water either sublimated away or froze beneath the surface.

NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander last week scraped through the dry red dust covering the planet's surface to reveal what appears to be white ice underneath.

Jeffrey Andrews-Hanna and colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Bruce Banerdt of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California said the impact theory, originally proposed in 1984 by Mars expert Steven Squyres of Cornell University, best explains the crater.

When the solar system was just maturing 4 billion years ago, big objects often smashed into one another.

"The formation of the Earth's Moon is attributed to a giant impact on the Earth by a Mars-sized body," they noted.  Continued...

Last updated by Robert E Dickinson Jun. 26, 2008.

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