There is no liquid water anywhere on Mars. It has no rivers and no canals. It is a dry, dusty planet.
mars
Mars has evidence of erosion by water, including river valleys, channels, and minerals formed in the presence of water. Mars once had liquid water flowing on its surface, shaping the landscape over time.
So far as we know in 2015, Mars does not have any running water to create floods.
Earth and mars. Mars' water can only be a gas and a solid.
Mars is known to have dry river beds, which are evidence of past water flow on the planet. These ancient river channels suggest that liquid water may have once existed on the Martian surface.
So far as we know in 2015, Mars does not have any running water to create floods.
no! there is not a river on planet 'mars'. mars is a chocolate bar Dur
there are river beds which must have Bean carved by water
Scientist are thinking Mars, because of river beds there.
Indications that suggest water existed on Mars include dried-up river channels, alluvial fans, ancient shorelines, mineral deposits formed in water-rich environments, and the presence of hydrated minerals like clay. Additionally, satellite images and rover data have revealed features such as gullies, deltas, and sediment layers that point to past water flow on Mars.
There is evidence that there was once water on Mars due to large gullies on its surface. This may suggest that running liquid water may have eroded it away and the fact that Mars has 'frozen' ice caps may suggest that it was once liquid water that had frozen over a large period of time.
Mars is believed to have had liquid water in the past based on evidence from river valleys, lake beds, and minerals that form in the presence of water. This suggests that ancient Mars was more hospitable to life than it is today.