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Lava coils offer insight into Mars’ geologic past

LOS ANGELES » A researcher has spotted lava flows shaped like coils of rope near the equator of Mars, the first time such geologic features have been discovered outside of Earth.

These twisty volcanic patterns can be found on Hawaii island and in the Pacific seafloor on our planet. While evidence for lava flows is pres­ent in many places on Mars, none are shaped like this latest find.

"I was quite surprised and puzzled when I first saw the coils," said Andrew Ryan, a graduate student at Arizona State University. He reported the discovery in today’s issue of the journal Science.

The biggest surprise? The largest Martian lava spiral measured 100 feet across — bigger than any on Earth. It is further evidence that Mars was volcanically active recently, geologically speaking, within the past 20 million years.

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Journal Science

For more than a decade, scientists debated whether this maze of valleys near the Martian equator was sculpted by ice or volcanic processes.

As part of a class proj­ect last year, Ryan analyzed about 100 high-resolution photos of the region snapped by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which has been photographing the Martian surface since 2006. One evening, while taking a second look at the images, Ryan zoomed in and noticed the lava coils. He counted 269 spirals ranging from 16 to 100 feet across.

Ryan said he was not surprised the features were overlooked in the past since they blended in with the terrain. The coils looked strikingly similar to Hawaii’s lava flows, leading Ryan to conclude that lava — not ice — was the driving force.

Planetary scientist David Paige of the University of California, Los Angeles, said the new work provides convincing evidence that the curious patterns were forged from volcanic activity.

This "illustrates just how complicated Mars’ geologic history appears to really be," Paige said. He was not part of the research team.

It’s believed that rivers of molten lava flowed through the Martian valleys into a broad basin where they settled and formed the coil shapes. The spiral shapes were preserved as the lava cooled.

There are no clear signs that the region today is volcanically active. Ryan said it is possible lava coils exist elsewhere on the red planet.

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