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  • We tend to think of Mars as a dead planet where all the exciting geologic activity

  • happened billions of years ago. But information from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter

  • shows us that Mars is still a very dynamic place.

  • Mars has a permanent ice cap made up of water ice at its north pole.

  • This pole is ringed by sand dunes, which we're looking straight down on.

  • These dunes are made of small bits of basalt, dark volcanic rock similar

  • to the rocks found around the Hawaiian volcanoes.

  • In the fall and winter, the temperatures are so cold that 30 percent of the Martian carbon

  • dioxide atmosphere freezes onto the ground, forming a seasonal polar cap.

  • The ground gets covered with a bright layer of seasonal carbon dioxide ice,

  • or 'dry ice,' that's about one to two feet thick.

  • When we flip between images taken at different times in the spring, we can see the dry ice

  • cracks form under the sun's heat as the solid carbon dioxide turns into gas.

  • The gas beneath the ice escapes, carrying dark sand and dust that move,

  • as we can see, down the steep sides of the dunes.

  • We are now looking at different parts of the vast field of dunes. These are called Barchan dunes.

  • At the start of this time-lapse, the dunes are covered

  • with seasonal dry ice so everything is roughly the same color.

  • The dark streaks and splotches are sand from the dune.

  • There are small splotches of sand at the crest of the dune. Then we start seeing the ice crack.

  • Sand is pushed to the top of the ice layer by the escaping gas outlining the cracks.

  • As time goes on, the cracks widen and fresh bright frost condenses in the vicinity.

  • Now, we see sand coming from the crest of the dune and sliding down the steep dune slopes.

  • A ferocious wind has picked up, blowing sand and dust across the dune.

  • Until the dark sand dune is free of seasonal ice. Let's watch that whole sequence again.

  • We start with ice-covered dunes in the early Spring.

  • Some areas of the ice rupture and crack, allowing sand and dust to escape along with the escaping gas.

  • The gas from the dry ice destabilizes the slopes, reshaping the dunes.

  • This activity happens every Spring in the vast dune fields of the Martian polar regions.

  • These are not the sort of events that would naturally occurs on Earth. Mars may look

  • Earth-like, but in some ways it is a very different planet from our own.

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