Using Earth to Understand How Water May Have Affected Volcanoes on Mars
Narration: LK Ward
Transcript:
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In early 2015, Earth saw the birth of a new island
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the first of its explosive type in 53 years
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The blast was so large that nearby tourists caught the explosion on camera
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The new island, unofficially known as Hunga Tonga - Hunga Ha'apai
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is located in the remote South Pacific
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nestled between two other islands in the Kingdom of Tonga
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It's the first island of its kind to erupt and persist in the modern satellite era,
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giving scientists an unprecedented view from space of its erosional evolution
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The event immediately caught the attention of Dr. Jim Garvin
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Chief Scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, geomorphologist and Mars expert
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It should be a pile of basaltic anticidic rocks
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That’s what you expect in this kind of setting…But there’s more
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What does a Mars expert see in the island that the rest of us don't?
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I think these small islands, small volcanic islands, freshly made, evolving rapidly
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are windows into the role of surface waters on Mars as they have effected
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small land forms like volcanoes. And we see fields of them on Mars!
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The island dramatically changed shape and size every day for the first few months
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About six months in, it finally stabilized
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We watched this island change. And it got more and more exciting
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It didn’t wash away. While there was massive erosion, there was redeposition protecting the island
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Similar processes seen on Earth may have been at work two or three billion years ago
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on Mars - persistent surface waters that may have fashioned
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the Martian terrain that is evident there today
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The truth is the two systems are actually cosmically related
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Our understanding of landforms on distant planets
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is directly informed by studying the evolution of similar features on Earth
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Earth is a magical place because, really, it’s our point of departure for everything
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And we come to realize in the last hundred years or so
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that it’s a far more dynamic world than we ever thought
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