Space Industry and Business News  
Martian Rock Arrangement Not Alien Handiwork

Andrew Leier
by Staff Writers
Calgary, Canada (SPX) Jan 13, 2009
At first, figuring out how pebble-sized rocks organize themselves in evenly-spaced patterns in sand seemed simple and even intuitive. But once Andrew Leier, an assistant geoscience professor at the U of C, started observing, he discovered that the most commonly held notions did not apply.

And even more surprising, was that his findings revealed answers to NASA's questions about sediment transport and surface processes on Mars. Those results are published in this month's edition of Geology.

Leier first studied loose pebbles and rocks, also known as clasts, when he was looking at sand dunes in Wyoming and noticed that the clasts seemed to spread away from each other in an almost organized fashion. It turns out,NASA was examining similar patterns on the sandy surface of Mars. (See figure No. 1 below.)

NASA proposed that wind was moving these rocks around. But Leier, who co-authored the study with Jon Pelletier at the University of Arizona and James Steidtmann at the University of Wyoming, says that would be impossible. They also discovered that rather than being pushed backward by the breeze, clasts actually tend to move into the direction of prevailing winds.

"The wind is less effective at moving clasts on Mars because the atmosphere is less dense," says Leier. "And for the wind to move the rocks downwind, it would have to be moving on the order of 8,000 kilometres an hour."

Instead, the loose sand around clasts is removed by the wind, causing scour-pits to form in front of larger clasts. Eventually, the rocks fall forward (or laterally) into the scours and then, the process repeats. Behind the larger grains, the sand is protected from the wind erosion and so a "sand-shadow" develops. This shadow prevents the clasts from being pushed downwind and from bunching up with one another. (See figure No. 2 below.)

Leier and his team first came up with these results through observation but then took them to a wind tunnel at the University of Wyoming to test the theory. Here, a tightly grouped bunch of small pebbles were buried in sand and then the wind tunnel was activated and results photographed. Surprisingly, as the sand was eroded by the wind, the larger clasts moved into the wind and spread out from one another.

Numerical models, based on the physics of wind transport, were run to test these ideas. Just like what was observed in the wind tunnel, the numerical models predict that as the sand is blown away, the large pebbles will spread out from one another, and often move into the direction of the wind, regardless of their initial configuration.

So through a few simple feedbacks, the larger grains on a windy, sandy surface will inherently spread out and organize (or dis-organize) themselves.

"What I find most interesting about this is that something as seemingly mundane as the distribution of rocks on a sandy, wind-blown surface can actually be used to tell us a lot about how wind-related processes operate on a place as familiar as the Earth and as alien as Mars," says Leier. "It's chaotic and simple at the same time."

Leier's article Wind-driven reorganization of coarse clasts on the surface of Mars is published in the January 2009 edition of Geology.

Related Links
University of Calgary
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Human Spaceflight To Mars Proposed Using Combination Of Space Shuttles
Hartford CT (SPX) Jan 09, 2009
Veteran inventor, business pioneer, futurist, and entrepreneur, Eric Knight, unveiled today his concept to enable the human exploration of Mars in a handful of years - instead of the 20-year timetable proposed by NASA and other space authorities.







  • Shortcovers turns iPhones into electronic books
  • Wall crumbling between televisions and computers
  • Windows 7 beta available worldwide on Friday
  • Sony debuts pocket-sized notebook computer

  • Hot Bird 10 Delivered For Multi-Payload Ariane 5 February Liftoff
  • Ariancespace Celebrates Year Of Successes
  • ISRO To Launch Four Foreign Satellites This Year
  • Arianespace To Launch Egyptian Satellite Nilesat 201

  • NASA Balloon Mission Tunes In To A Cosmic Radio Mystery
  • Boeing Ends 2008 With 662 Commercial Airplane Orders
  • China moves to bail out aviation industry amid global crisis
  • Cathay Pacific books 7.6 billion HK dollar loss over oil hedging

  • Boeing Increases Capability Of On-Orbit US Navy Satellite
  • Boeing Develops Common Software To Reduce Risk For TSAT
  • USAF Tests Battlespace Information Solution On AC-130 Gunship
  • Harris Awarded Contract For USAF Satellite Control Network Program

  • Princeton Researchers Discover New Type Of Laser
  • Solving The Mysteries Of Metallic Glass
  • Brazil Begins Mechanical Tests On Satellites
  • Lockheed Martin SBIRS Team Delivers Major Subsystems For Second GEO Satellite

  • Berndt Feuerbacher New President Of IAU
  • Orbital Appoints Frank Culbertson And Mark Pieczynski To Management
  • Chris Smith Named Director Of Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory
  • AsiaSat Appoints New General Manager China

  • DMCii and DynAgra Help Farmers Control Costs And Boost Yields
  • Malaysia uses satellite to fight illegal logging: report
  • India To Launch Own Online Earth Browser Dubbed Bhuvan
  • New Satellite Data Reveal Impact Of Olympic Pollution Controls

  • Raytheon Team Completes Final Major Milestones On Next-Generation GPS Control Segment
  • ESRI Announces Grant Program For CCIM Institute Members
  • Boeing Receives JDAM And SDB Production Contracts
  • Savi Wins Role On DoD RFID III Contract Vehicle

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement