Mars Surface Made of Shifting Plates Like Earth, Study Suggests

mars plate tectonics
A view of the central segment of Mars' huge Valles Marineris canyon system, which may hold evidence of active plate tectonics.
(Image credit: Image from Google Mars created by MOLA Science Team))

The surface of Mars has been shaped by plate tectonics in the recent past, a new study suggests, making the Red Planet perhaps a better candidate to host life than scientists had thought. Mars may even experience seismic shifts, or 'Marsquakes,' every million years or so.

Scientists have long believed that plate tectonics — in which huge crustal plates pull apart, smash together and dive under one another — exist nowhere in our solar system but Earth. But the phenomenon is also active on Mars, according to the new study.

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