[Is Mars Habitable? by Alfred Russel Wallace]@TWC D-Link bookIs Mars Habitable? CHAPTER III 2/17
Twenty-four hours later a corresponding plate showed this same area brilliantly white; the result apparently of a great Martian snowfall.
In 1882 the same observer witnessed the steady disappearance of 1,600,000 square miles of the southern snow-cap, an area nearly one-third of that hemisphere of the planet.] The rapid and comparatively early disappearance of the white covering is, very reasonably, supposed to prove that it is of small thickness, corresponding perhaps to about a foot or two of snow in north-temperate America and Europe, and that by the increasing amount of sun-heat it is converted, partly into liquid and partly into vapour.
Coincident with this disappearance and as a presumed result of the water (or other liquid) producing inundations, the bluish-green tinge which appears on the previously dark portion of the surface is supposed to be due to a rapid growth of vegetation. But the evidence on this point does not seem to be clear or harmonious, for in the four coloured plates showing the planet's surface at successive Martian dates from December 30th to February 21st, not only is a considerable extent of the south temperate zone shown to change rapidly from bluish-green to chocolate-brown and then again to bluish-green, but the portions furthest from the supposed fertilising overflow are permanently green, as are also considerable portions in the opposite or northern hemisphere, which one would think would then be completely dried up. _No Hills upon Mars._ The special point to which I here wish to call attention is this.
Mr. Lowell's main contention is, that the surface of Mars is wonderfully smooth and level.
Not only are there no mountains, but there are no hills or valleys or plateaux.
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