The European Space Agency (ESA) reported in a press release that INCA Town has no mark of Jiggy Stardust. But ESA’s Mars Express has captured spiders marks in the South Pol area of Mars. The agency made it clear that apparently these spiders are not. These are just small shapes that are formed on the planet during winter. When the rays of the sun fall on the accumulated carbon dioxide, such a figure is formed. Due to the rays of the sun, the carbon dioxide gas below begins to form and breaks the ice and comes out. This ice can be thick up to three feet.
The agency said that even though these spots look small when they look at the space, they are actually very big. Among them, the smallest spot is also 145 feet, and the big spot can be bigger up to half a mile. According to newsweek, such spider patterns were seen in 2020. At that time these patterns were seen by Exomars Hint Fuel Orbiter which was launched in 2016. This orbiter is engaged in searching the old marks of life on Mars.
These black spots are present on the outer part of an area of Mars called Inca Town. The region was discovered by a NASA spacecraft in 1972. It is also called Angustus Labyrinthus. The region is present near the southern polar cap of Mars. According to the agency, it is not yet known how this area will be formed. But there have been speculations that the sand mounds must have been transformed into stone over time. Mars Categorical Spacecraft arrived in Mars in 2003. For two decades, it has been examining the atmosphere of Mars. Searching for water marks on the surface of Mars. It also has a surface of two moons of Mars.
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