News
1d
Discover Magazine on MSNAncient Riverbeds on Mars Suggest Red Planet Was Wetter and More Complex Than Previously ThoughtResearchers examining Noachis Terra in Mars’ southern highlands found evidence of extensive river networks – some hundreds of ...
5d
Live Science on MSNMystery of Mars' missing water could be solved by the planet's tipsy tiltMars has lost immense amounts of water over it lifetime, and scientists aren't sure exactly how. New research hints that the ...
A 54-pound meteorite from Mars is expected to fetch up to $4 million when it goes up for auction later this month at ...
8h
Space on MSNThe largest Mars rock on Earth is up for auction in NYC — it could be yours for $4 million (or more)This Mars rock is up for auction at Sotheby's in New York City this week, which is why it's currently on display in the Upper ...
Science Unbound on MSN9h
Mars Dune Alpha - Simulating Life on the Red PlanetBlake Lively Wins Ruling That Her Deposition in Justin Baldoni Case Will Be Held on Her Turf 'I didn't want this to die': The ...
A chunk of the Martian surface that made an unlikely voyage to Earth will be available to the highest bidder at Sotheby's ...
3h
ZME Science on MSNNASA finally figures out what’s up with those “Mars spiders”They're not actual spiders, of course, but rather strange geological features.
Opinion
25dOpinion
Space.com on MSNIs Mars really red? A physicist explains the planet’s reddish hue and why it looks different to some telescopesYour blood is also red because of a mixture of iron and oxygen in a molecule called hemoglobin. So in a way, the ancient connection between the planet Mars and blood wasn’t completely wrong. Rust, ...
New discoveries by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover may not only explain why the Red Planet is a dry, lifeless desert, but that it ...
Sixty years ago today, NASA’s Mariner 4 spacecraft took the first up-close images of Mars, changing humanity's understanding ...
1d
LAist on MSNThe first close-up images of Mars still elicit wonder, 60 years after they were capturedMariner 4, built by JPL in Pasadena, took the images on July 14, 1965. One of the mission's leaders reflects on decades of ...
The red, brown and gray hunk is about 70% larger than the next largest piece of Mars found on Earth and represents nearly 7% ...
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