Mars stores enough groundwater to form oceans on the planet's surface, an analysis of the data collected by NASA has suggested. However, the water is present several kilometres the surface, so extracting it to «supply a future Mars colony» is not feasible, the researches said.
The amount of groundwater it contains can cover the entire planet, which is about half of Earth's size, to a depth of up to two kilometres, according to the research team.
For those tracking the fate of water after the planet's oceans disappeared over three billion years ago, the study's results are «good news,» the researchers, including those from the University of California (UC) in Berkeley, US, said.
It is said that water from Mars was lost to space when its magnetic field collapsed and the solar winds destroyed its atmosphere.
The findings, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, are an indication that much of the water did not escape into space but filtered down into the crust.
The analysis provides the best evidence to date that the planet still has liquid water in addition to that frozen at its poles, the researchers said.
However, the reservoir of liquid water, which is located in tiny cracks and pores in rocks in the middle of the Martian crust at about 11.5-20 kilometres below the surface, would not be of much use to anyone «trying to tap into it to supply a future Mars colony», they said.
Even on Earth, drilling a hole a kilometer deep is a challenge, the researchers explained.
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