You are 200
miles directly above the Martian surface — looking down. This image was
taken by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Jan. 27, 2010. (The color
was added later.) What do we see? Well, sand, mostly. As you scroll
down, there's a ridge crossing through the image, then a plain, then
dunes, but keep looking. You will notice, when you get to the dunes,
there are little black flecks dotting the ridges, mostly on the sunny
side, like sunbathing spiders sitting in rows. Can you see them?
Michael Benson/NASA/JPL/University of Arizona/Kinetikon Pictures
What are those things? They were first
seen in 1998; they don't look like anything we have here on Earth. To
this day, no one is sure what they are, but we now know this: They come,
then they go. Every Martian spring, they appear out of nowhere, showing
up — 70 percent of the time — where they were the year before. They pop
up suddenly, sometimes overnight. When winter comes, they vanish.
More - Link >>>
http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2012/10/02/162147810/are-those-spidery-black-things-on-mars-dangerous-yup
Source: National Public Radio.
gaw
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