Mars surface

This image taken by the European Space Agency's Mars Express orbiter shows an oblique view focusing on one of the fractures making up the Cerberus Fossae system. The fractures cut through hills and craters, indicating their relative youth. Credit: ESA/DLR/FU Berlin

The Red Planet may still be alive! After a gigantic “marsquake” in May 2022, scientists here on Earth are now saying that Mars could still have layers of molten rock under the surface — revealing ongoing volcanic activity.

It’s that volcanic activity, from an “active mantle plume,” which is pushing lava to the surface and causing earthquakes as it cracks open the planet’s rocky crust, according to researchers from the University of Arizona.

“The heyday of Martian volcanism ended over three billion years ago, and for most of the time humans have been exploring Mars, we have thought of it as geologically dead,” explains Hank Green of YouTube channel SciShow in the video below. “But in 2018, NASA’s InSight mission delivered a seismometer to the planet’s surface. And at least in the region known as Elysium Planitia, the ground has spent the past four years quaking… Maybe mantle plumes are to blame.”

A team from UCLA says the May 2022 marsquake lasted four hours and also exposed layering in the planet’s crust that may reveal a meteoroid impact long ago. The 4.7 magnitude quake released five times more energy than any previously recorded by humans monitoring the Red Planet.

About Chris Melore

Chris Melore has been a writer, researcher, editor, and producer in the New York-area since 2006. He won a local Emmy award for his work in sports television in 2011.

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2 Comments

  1. Zach says:

    We must build mars a bigger moon to ster up that core to wake it up.

  2. Tommy Salami says:

    We just have to drill 800 miles down to reach the martian core and use a nuclear fusion reactor to heat it up a little more to create a magnetic field, it’s easy as counting 1 2 3 .