Breaking 17:50 Wistron president dismisses AI bubble fears amid US factory ramp-up 17:20 Hidden risks behind Roblox raise concerns for family safety 17:00 Global fallout follows release of sealed court records 17:00 Iran calls nuclear talks with the United States in Oman a constructive first step 16:40 China unveils compact microwave weapon capable of disrupting Starlink 16:20 Zelensky announces next Ukraine peace talks likely in United States soon 16:00 Zelensky criticizes air defense after massive Russian drone barrage 15:40 Iran's president appoints Ali Shamkhani to lead new Defense Council 15:20 Morocco captivates Indian tourism professionals at OTM 2026 14:50 'Rich Dad Poor Dad' author sells Bitcoin and awaits market bottom 14:20 Stellantis books €22 billion charge and suspends dividend after EV missteps 13:50 Oil prices rise on US-Iran nuclear talks in Oman but head for weekly decline 13:20 Egypt and Turkey sign $350 million defense deal for drones and weapons 12:50 Gold prices dip below $5,000 after Fed official's cautious rate cut remarks 12:45 HM King Mohammed VI congratulates Laura Fernandez on her election as Costa Rica’s president 12:30 Mosque explosion in Islamabad kills at least 11 and injures dozens 12:20 EU tests Matrix protocol to replace US communication platforms 12:15 African Development Bank grants donation to Bank Al-Maghrib to boost digital payments 12:00 Bitcoin plunges as banque de France governor warns risks are materializing 11:50 Italian police gain preemptive arrest powers before protests 11:45 Stellantis shares plunge 15% after announcing €22 billion exceptional charges for 2025 11:30 Jack Lang summoned to French Foreign Ministry over links to Jeffrey Epstein 11:20 Russian GRU general shot in Moscow assassination attempt 11:00 Two arrested in Istanbul for alleged spying on behalf of Israel 10:50 COVID lockdowns triggered record methane surge 10:30 Iran and United States open nuclear talks in Oman 10:20 US ambassador cuts ties with Polish parliament leader over Trump criticism 10:00 Disconnecting to reconnect with reality 10:00 Hong Kong court to announce sentence for pro-democracy media tycoon Jimmy Lai 09:50 Martian meteorite hides ancient water reservoir 09:30 Toyota appoints new chief executive to speed up decision-making 09:20 Global stocks plunge on tech rout and Korean trading halt 09:00 Noureddine Bensouda, a career in the service of the Moroccan state 08:50 China unveils world's first mass-produced sodium-ion EV 08:30 Türkiye seen as a vital partner for Canada, says Carney 08:20 Deutsche Bank sees Bitcoin selloff as fading conviction 08:00 China and South Korea discuss resuming joint maritime search drills 07:50 Ukrainian civilian plane with minigun downs nearly 150 Russian drones 07:40 Moroccan Sahara issue strengthens Rabat’s position within Afro-British alliances 07:20 Australian premier arrives in Indonesia for security pact 07:00 Mohammed VI Foundation drives medical fee reduction at Casablanca hospital

Martian meteorite hides ancient water reservoir

Yesterday 09:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Martian meteorite hides ancient water reservoir

A new study uncovers previously hidden hydrated minerals inside one of Earth's most famous Martian meteorites, providing direct evidence that liquid water once permeated the Red Planet billions of years ago.

Led by Estrid Buhl Naver from the Technical University of Denmark, researchers employed advanced non-destructive scanning techniques to probe the interior of NWA 7034, known as "Black Beauty." They identified hydrogen-rich iron oxyhydroxide clasts representing a newly discovered water reservoir in Mars' ancient crust, according to a preprint on arXiv. Phys.org reported the findings this week amid ongoing quests to unravel Mars' watery past, following NASA's recent cancellation of the Mars Sample Return mission.

Discovered in Morocco's Sahara Desert in 2011, Black Beauty comprises materials dating back about 4.48 billion years, among the solar system's oldest known Martian fragments. It formed when a massive impact on Mars melted and fused crustal pieces before ejecting them into space.

Neutron tomography and X-ray computed tomography revealed hydrogen-rich iron oxyhydroxides, labeled H-Fe-ox, making up 0.4% of the tested sample's volume. These clusters hold about 11% of the sample's total water content. Overall, Black Beauty contains roughly 6,000 parts per million of water, the highest among analyzed Martian meteorites. This non-destructive approach advances beyond traditional methods requiring sample cutting or dissolution.

The discovery aligns with NASA's Perseverance rover observations in Jezero Crater. Though from a different Mars location, hydrated iron oxyhydroxides in both suggest widespread subsurface water reservoirs on early Mars. "These alteration assemblages closely resemble those seen in Perseverance's Jezero Crater samples, where hydrated iron oxyhydroxides also appear," the researchers wrote.

The timing proves bittersweet. In January 2026, U.S. Congress confirmed no funding for NASA's Mars Sample Return, effectively canceling the program after budget concerns ballooned costs from an estimated $11 billion to a final $7 billion proposal. Researchers hoped to apply their CT scanning to Perseverance's sealed titanium tube samples on Mars' surface. "This magnificent meteorite essentially serves as a sample return mission in one rock," Phys.org noted. With China's Tianwen-3 sample return slated for the 2030s, Black Beauty remains Earth's prime window into Mars' ancient watery crust for now.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.