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DennisW
So are humans also causing the polar ice caps to melt on mars? I agree the climate is changing but I don't think mankind is influencing the change.
Dennis,
It is routine for the polar ice caps on Mars to melt during the course of the Martian year. The Martian south pole generally has more ice than its north pole. At different times of year, depending upon the planet's tilt toward or away from the Sun, one pole will melt while the opposite pole accrets and then this evolution reverses half a Martian year later. The visible Martian ice is mostly frozen carbon dioxide, not water as we know it. While there is water ice on Mars it apparently is located just a few inches beneath the surface in the northern and southern zones. What percentage of this is H2O or CO2 is not certain. Anyway, when the poles melt, not all of it rushes to the opposite pole. Some of it remains suspended in the very thin Martian atmosphere which again is mostly carbon dioxide.
Any attempt to equate climate on Mars with climate on Earth is futile. Other than the fact these two rocky planets rotate on their axis and have north and south poles, they have little else in common as far as present day climate is concerned.
Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 02/28/2010 08:17AM by tomdisco.