Abstract
1 min readThe concept of a frontier is a commonplace metaphor in the physical sciences, as well as in the history of exploration. Today, one of the most tangible and alluring of all such frontiers is represented by the surface of Mars. This is because of the literally phenomenal scientific progress that has resulted from the intensified robotic exploration of the Red Planet since 1996. In little more than a decade (1996–2007), scientific viewpoints have been altered more profoundly than in the previous 30 + years. Some would describe this radical alteration in thinking as a scientific revolution. A case for this perspective is made in a convincing fashion here in The Martian Surface: Composition, Mineralogy, and Physical Properties, edited by Jim Bell and written by him and 82 other colleagues who study Mars for a living. Indeed, since the dawn of the Space Age, now in its 50th year (1957–2007), thoughts have often drifted to the so-called “Martian frontier,” with an ever-changing and sometimes disappointing scientific appreciation of what it might offer. This book puts the emerging “new Mars” into a modern scientific context on the basis of an ensemble of up-to-date scientific hypotheses and viewpoints. It brings Mars alive and promotes prospects for future scientific exploration that are certain to continue the revolution at hand.
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