And now we come to something as important: at the opposition of 1905 the curious alternation metamorphosis was enacted anew. The Amenthes appeared, disappeared to be replaced by the Thoth, and then reappeared again beside the other. This corroboration of behavior showed the previous observations to have been due to no mistake, and only served to deepen the interest in this last and more singular phase of canal conduct.
CHAPTER XXVI
ARCTIC CANALS AND POLAR RIFTS
Last in time but not least in importance of the details of canal development to be detected is one that connects these strange features directly with the melting of the polar caps. The cartouches showed that such connection was to be inferred; the facts now to be recorded depict it by an identity of place between certain phenomena of the two subjects following one another in order of time.
On January 8, 1897, while scanning the planet, I was suddenly ware of a rift in the north polar cap. It ran a little to the west of south from where it started in at the cap’s edge and went clean through to the limb, the pole being then slightly tilted away from us. At the time it seemed to be the first rift ever seen in that cap; but on opening a little later Schiaparelli’s Memoria Quarta, which had just arrived, the first thing my eye fell on was a drawing of a rift in the north polar cap observed by him when the planet had held the like attitude toward the Earth thirteen years before. Reference to its longitude showed it to be the identical rift, seen again after all these years and the only one so far seen in the northern cap.
At the next opposition more rifts were detected, one in especial on December 27, running from Arethusa Lucus, then upon the edge of the cap, athwart the snow in a northwesterly direction.
In the forepart of the opposition of 1901, which in its Martian season corresponded to that in 1897, when the rift had been observed, many rifts were detected in the cap, and among them one traversing the cap north-northeasterly in longitude 136°.
So far the season when the cap had been observed was that when the rifts were in process of forming. The ground they and the snow-cap covered had not yet at any opposition been uncovered.
It was only when my observations began in the latter half of the opposition of 1901 that, the season on Mars having so far advanced, all snow in those latitudes had melted. Then appeared, however, the canal Hippalus, an arctic canal of some importance, lying on that part of the planet previously occupied by the polar cap. When later studying the observations on the rifts I remembered this canal, and turning to the drawing made some months before to compare the two critically, discovered that the canal occupied the precise position held earlier by the rift. One had said the rift had never vanished, but that the white surrounding it had simply turned to ochre. Here, then, was a striking coincidence of place, too exact to be the result of chance.
Impressed by the identity, I examined all the other rifts seen early in 1901, comparing them with the arctic canals seen later, to the finding of no less than five cases of the same coinciding positions.