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"Update on the "Black Hole" on Mars"

4 Comments -

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Blogger stefan said...

Dear Bee,


wow, thank you, that's very intersting news! I didn't hear it so far, and this story with this strange "black hole" is definitly worth to follow up!

Cheers, Stefan

1:14 PM, September 02, 2007

Anonymous Uncle Al said...

1) Southern Tamaulipas, Mexico, El Zacatón cenote (geothermal sinkhole). 1070 feet deep.

2) Eastern Sierra Madre Mountains in central Mexico, Sotano de las Golondrinas. 1300 feet deep.

3) Croatia Velebit National Park. Darko Baksici discovered a 1693 foot deep karst hole.

If the Mars hole is an indicator of karst topography, isn't that fun?

http://www.belize1.com/pages/town/bluehole.html

6:30 PM, September 02, 2007

Blogger Neil' said...

Yes, fascinating. Aren't there some other weird-looking pictures of Mars features, (not even counting the "face" which isn't as impressive close up but still fetching) like meandering glassy tentacle-like extensions with stripes around them etc, that even got some members of US Congress asking for more pictures and explanations?

BTW Bee, at Cosmic Variance the new post is about "Public transportation in Germany: Efficient, expensive, and deadly" You might want to weigh in, and BTW I lived in Kaiserslautern for three years a few decades ago.

8:16 PM, September 02, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Hi Uncle Al,

I am not an expert in geology, but it seems that the Mars hole is not a karst phenomenon, but has volcanic origins - i.e. created by large bubbles of gas connected to volcanism.

Best, stefan

3:05 PM, September 07, 2007

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