It is thought to have formed by slippage of material along huge faults in the crystal layer.
The best guess is a vast quantity of flowing water over a long period of time.
Or Flowing silicon dust which acted similarly to flowing water.
yes.
the surface on jupiter is that it has no surface at all
Mars has dry canyons which were clearly caused by the action of running water in the distant past.
rocky and dusty. Volcanoes and canyons. Also polar caps.
On Mars there is a lot of volcanoes (which are the biggest ones in our solar system) also there are alot of canyons which were caused by fault zones. There are also polar ice caps where the little water that is there is frozen.
yes the moon has canyons along with mountains
Yes, Mars has many mountains and canyons. Check out Valles Marineris, a huge canyon on the planets surface, with many smaller canyons and valleys around it.
MARS
mars is dry, red and it has big conyons 5times bigger the the grand canyons
Yes. In fact, the planet Mars has about 2,500 miles of canyons; the name for this system is "Valles Marineris."
Yes
canyons and sedimentary deposits
An interesting feature of Mars is that there are volcanoes on its surface. There are also different types of erosion, canyons, and dust storms.
Mars has the biggest mountain than the others and deeper canyons than the other planets
Satalite images of mars have located many "Canyons" which Astrologists and Astro-Geologists say once carried water.
red soil, huge canyons, largest volcano in the solar system, ect.
earth's neighbour is the planet Mars. Earth and Mars are similar, they both have canyons and valleys and mountains. but Mars is smaller and much colder then our planetby Taonui Ashley Motuhino Campbell Roach