In this brief résumé of Lowell's work on Mars but scant justice has been done to the many novel and convincing suggestions in explanation of the varied features marking the surface of Mars. There are many enigmas, however, awaiting solution, if we endeavor to explain them by comparison with the methods pursued by man on this Earth, and Mr. Lowell frankly admits the many difficulties in the way of a clear solution. I have already mentioned how puzzling the checker-board appearance of our Western townships would seem to a Martian, but this comparison does not help us to understand the so-called gemination of the canals, though we might have parallel sets of canals, as we have parallel lines of railways. The enormous distance which the water travels in the Martian canals must presuppose an artificial method of urging it on. Precisely how this operation might be accomplished is a question to be solved by the mechanical and hydraulic engineer.
Beside the doubling, or so-called gemination, of the canals, there are other enigmas in the markings. At certain times there has been observed in the equatorial region of Mars a number of white spots, which have greatly puzzled the student of Mars and for which no explanation has yet been offered. That they are not clouds is seen in the fact that they do not move or drift. Furthermore these white spots are fixed features of the region, as they appear in the same places. It might be suggested that they represent snow-capped elevations or mountain peaks, but this is difficult to believe, as an examination of the terminator of Mars reveals no evidences of high elevations. These white spots appear only in mid-summer, which would argue against the idea of their being snow caps, as in mid-summer they would certainly melt and disappear. The time of their appearance coincides with the time of greatest equatorial heat. For a reasonable suggestion it might be offered that these white spots are due to vegetation of some kind. The cotton belt of the South, if one could imagine the cotton bolls a little larger and more crowded together, would make white areas. Masses of white flowers, such as the whiteweed or daisy, may be seen covering hundreds of acres of meadow land in New England. I have noticed from the tops of mountains in New Hampshire, in July, extensive meadow lands resembling fields of snow from the profusion of white daisies. The blossoming of fruit trees in the Santa Clara valley, California, whitens the surface for miles. Since the appearance of these white spots in Mars corresponds with the period of greatest evaporation, it is conceivable that an intelligence in Mars might utilize the same method which has been recently adopted in Connecticut and Porto Rico in the raising of tobacco; namely, to protect the fields with white cotton cloth; or, as in Florida, where extensive orange groves are covered with white cloth to guard against sudden frost. That this supposition has something to commend it may be seen in the accompanying reproduction of a photograph (Plate I), made in Porto Rico, of tobacco plantations when the fields are covered with white cloth supported on suitable frames. This picture appeared in an article by Eugene P. Lyle, Jr., on Porto Rico, in the January number of "World's Work," to the publishers of which we are indebted for the privilege of using it.
These various guesses may all be wrong, as, after all, we are judging Mars from conditions belonging to our own planet. This, however, we are compelled to do, as we have no other standards of comparison.
PLATE I
TOBACCO CULTIVATION UNDER CLOTH, PORTO RICO
[V]
TESTIMONY OF ASTRONOMERS
That there may be types of life of some kind on Mars is, I should think, quite likely.
Sir Robert Ball.