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Shalbatana Vallis

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Mars Express uncovers megaflood landscape hinting at an ancient Martian ocean
space1 month ago

Mars Express uncovers megaflood landscape hinting at an ancient Martian ocean

ESA’s Mars Express reveals a hundreds-of-miles-long, several-miles-wide, and over-a-thousand-feet-deep channel in Shalbatana Vallis with chaotic terrain and layered deposits, strengthening the case that episodic floods fed a northern ocean on Mars. While the data support a pulsed-ocean scenario with water periodically releasing from subsurface ice, the debate over whether the ocean was long-lived or episodic remains unsettled.

Mars Express uncovers ancient flood-carved chaos in Shalbatana Vallis
space1 month ago

Mars Express uncovers ancient flood-carved chaos in Shalbatana Vallis

European Space Agency's Mars Express orbiter released high-resolution imagery of Shalbatana Vallis, a sprawling Martian channel near the equator, revealing chaotic terrain formed by catastrophic groundwater-fed floods about 3.5 billion years ago; the main channel is roughly 6 miles wide and plunges about 500 meters, with layered deposits and volcanic ash indicating multiple floods, lava flows, and erosion that point to Mars being warmer and wetter in the past and possibly hosting an ancient ocean near Chryse Planitia.

ESA Image Reveals Volcanic Ash Lining an Ancient Martian Waterway
space1 month ago

ESA Image Reveals Volcanic Ash Lining an Ancient Martian Waterway

ESA’s Mars Express released a high-resolution view of Shalbatana Vallis, a nearly 1,300 km long Martian channel once carved by flowing water. The image shows dark volcanic ash concentrated along the valley floor, likely carried by winds, with hints of buried ice and subsidence shaping the landscape. The findings illustrate how Mars’ ancient hydrology and volcanic activity coexisted, leaving a rich record for studying its past climate and potential habitability.

Ancient groundwater carved a 1300-km Martian channel in Shalbatana Vallis
space1 month ago

Ancient groundwater carved a 1300-km Martian channel in Shalbatana Vallis

ESA’s Mars Express highlights Shalbatana Vallis, a 1300-km, water-worn channel near Mars’ equator formed about 3.5 billion years ago by groundwater floods. The image reveals winding valleys, chaotic terrain, and hints of past lava flows and volcanic ash, with nearby Chryse Planitia—a region some scientists speculate may have hosted an ancient Martian ocean. The mission’s HRSC data continue to map Mars in 3D and color, deepening our understanding of its watery past.