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By Emily Lakdawalla




Windows onto the abyss: cave skylights on Mars

May. 23, 2007 | 10:57 PDT | 17:57 UTC
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Today's set of image releases from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter HiRISE team included this one, of a fairly bland-looking lava plain to the northeast of Arsia Mons. Bland, that is, except for a black spot in the center. What's that black spot? It's a window onto an underground world.

Cave entrance on the flank of Arsia Mons
Cave entrance on the flank of Arsia Mons
In this HiRISE image captured on May 7, 2007, a black spot mars the flank of Arsia Mons. The spot is most likely a skylight onto a subterranean cavern. Credit: NASA / JPL / U. Arizona
This black spot is one of seven possible entrances to subterranean caves identified on Mars by Glen Cushing, Tim Titus, J. Judson Wynne and Phil Christensen in a paper they presented at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in March (PDF format, 322k). Here's the figure from their paper that shows the seven caves, which they refer to by the names Dena, Chloe, Wendy, Annie, Abbey, Nikki, and Jeanne:
Possible cave entrances on Mars
Possible cave entrances on Mars
Seven dark spots seen in Mars Odyssey THEMIS images could be the entrances to underground caves on Mars. The researchers who identified these caves have given them the following names:
Dena (-6.084 N, 239.061 E)
Chloe (-4.926 N, 239.193 E)
Wendy (-8.099 N, 240.242 E)
Annie (-6.267 N, 240.005 E)
Abbey & Nikki (-8.498 N, 240.349 E)
Jeanne (-5.636 N, 241.259 E)
Credit: NASA / JPL / U. Arizona / G. Cushing et al. 2007

Their identifications were based upon Mars Odyssey THEMIS images, which achieve resolutions of a little better than 20 meters per pixel; having spotted the caves, they requested that the sharper-eyed HiRISE camera on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter target the spots for more detailed imaging. The image above is the first one of these, and it shows the cave entrance called Jeanne. So what more can we learn from the HiRISE image? Let's check it out at full resolution (you'll have to click to enlarge for the full glory of 25 centimeters per pixel, a number I still goggle at every time I think about it).
Cave entrance on the flank of Arsia Mons
Cave entrance on the flank of Arsia Mons
At its highest resolution of 25 centimeters per pixel, the HiRISE camera can see the detailed shape of the slightly scalloped edge of a hole on the flank of Mars' Arsia Mons (left), but no amount of image enhancement (right) can bring out any further details inside the hole. That means that the walls of the cave are overhanging -- the cave is larger below the ground than the entrance we can see at the surface -- and that it is very deep. Mars' dusty atmosphere produces enough scattered light that "skylight" would illuminate the floor of a shallow cavern well enough for HiRISE to detect it. Credit: NASA / JPL / U. Arizona
The hope for the HiRISE images was that we could see some details from inside the hole. But as you can see by the highly stretched version at right, there is absolutely nothing visible inside that hole. It's black black black black black. HiRISE is a very sensitive instrument, and Mars' dusty atmosphere scatters quite a bit of light around, so there is certainly light entering that cave hole and bouncing around the interior. But it seems that the cave is so big and so deep that almost none of the light that enters the cave comes out. It's deep, and it's big; the hole that we see really is just a skylight on a big subterranean room. How big? We'll never know for sure without visiting it, but I expect that Cushing and his coauthors and the HiRISE team will be crunching the numbers on the illumination conditions and the sensitivity of the camera to put a lower limit on how deep that cave must be for HiRISE to be able to see nothing at all inside it.

Think about that. All these orbiters at Mars, and most of them are just seeing the surface and atmosphere. To be sure, there are two instruments up there -- MARSIS on Mars Express and SHARAD on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter -- that are probing the shape of the subsurface with ground-penetrating radar. But neither of those instruments have the resolution necessary to tell us what the inside of this cave looks like. It might as well be in the greatest depths of space. Here there be dragons. What's down there? Are there stalactites and stalagmites and crystals, or is it just a vast open room or tunnel?

Maybe these spots will be explored by Martian speleologists someday. But that day is a distant one, I'm sure. Earth speleologists are only now exploring some of the biggest holes in our world.

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Comments

Mars
The word, 'Mars' signifies WAR in all cultures. It may sound far-fetched, but looking at the pictures of the dried up river beds, lakes and oceans on the planet, one can't help but wonder why all that water vanished! Lets suppose for a moment that an 'advanced' civilisation once existed on Mars, and like all so-called 'advanced' civilisations, it ended up in an all-consuming catastrophic world war. It's possible that the resulting massive conflagrations caused by this war made most of the water on the surface of Mars to evaporate and disappear, hence the dried up riverbeds etc. It may also be possible to suggest (on pain of being called mad) that Humans owe their existance to a Martian couple which initially landed at one point on planet Earth (A & E??), to escape the cataclysmic events on their planet, and whose offsprings subsequently spread out and settled all over the world, and adapted to their own surroundings(that's why we all look different). The Mayans predicted a similar catastrophe here on Earth which will happen in 2012 according to the Mayan calendar. It may not be a world War this time, but something brought on by natural events. But it's still not too late to realise that the day the term 'Evolution' is replaced by 'Adaptation', humans will have taken a step closer to living on this planet (for 2 years anyway) as one race - the Human race - or should I say, the Martian race!
#1 - Nujrakash - 05/17/2010 - 15:31
misanthropist
Uh... You're kiddin' right?
#2 - sam - 06/20/2010 - 08:48
HaHa. That's funny.
#3 - Dee - 06/24/2010 - 11:14
tech
wow maybe its a natrually ocuuring event and life forms on mars live on the inside of the planet void of light and atmosphere, or maybe its just another empty whole in a planet that formed froma gas pocket that was hit by a meteor and collapsed
#4 - dan - 06/24/2010 - 12:19
Down the Lunar Rabbit-hole
Also see (at the Moon):
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2010/12jul_rabbithole/

Observatorio ARVAL
www.oarval.org
#5 - Andres Valencia - 02/13/2011 - 17:45
Lair of the Soup Dragon
It's so obvious, this is the home of the Clangers.
#6 - Jasper - 02/14/2011 - 00:01
not so far off
Given the existence of "The Face", "the D&M Pyramid" and other anomalous features on Mars (sometimes referred to as the Monuments of Mars) I think Nuirakash's hypothesis deserves some consideration. This SpaceMarine is also curious about the odd similarity b/t Nuirakash's A & E story, and the plot of the FPS game "Doom 3" in which ancient in-game Martian stone tablets reveal a plot pretty much exactly like the one N. is describing. Eerie coincidence or something more?
#7 - SpaceMarine - 02/14/2011 - 16:14
data analyst
Sorry folks, looks to me like high altitude objects between Mars surface and the orbiter. On each image there is a distinct highlight on an edge that is not detectable on the surface of the planet, I believe this is due to the objects being at a high enough altitude to reflect sunlight. Remember Mars is smaller than earth therefore the horizen is closer.
#8 - Ghost - 03/08/2011 - 18:10
believer
Maybe the water is inside Mars. Maybe it creates a atmosphere inside Mars. Maybe we wont find out before December 21st 2012. :)
#9 - chris - 03/10/2011 - 09:24
Hollow Earth
Hey i have been reading up alot about earth, mars, and the hollow earth theory and alot of it sounds strange but at the same time makes logical sense. So if anyone wants to have a live chat with me over msn and talk about things to do with well anything to do with earth, universes, ghosts etc anything that people choose to believe is not true then add me to msn my addy is danielyoule@live.co.uk i am logged in most days. Danny
#10 - Daniel Youle - 03/21/2011 - 01:35
Mars was named AFTER the war god, not the other way around. I'd like to hear your theories about Venus though.
#11 - uhh - 12/15/2011 - 06:24
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