The importance of the identification here made of an arctic canal with a previous rift in the polar cap has led me to make a list of the canals thus identified at this opposition.
| Visible as a Rift | Visible as a Canal | |
| Hypanis | January 1 and February 4 | April 18 (?), May 20, 22, 27, June 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 25 |
| Hippalus | January 19 and February 4 | April 18, May 27 |
| Rhombites | February 4 | May 27 |
| Python | February 20 | March 31 |
| Zygatis | January 18, 19 | May 7, June 3 to 8 |
If it be asked why these canals do not appear recorded at the March presentation as either the one phenomenon or the other, the answer is twofold. First, because they showed as shadings lost amidst a shaded mass; and, secondly, the observations at several oppositions indicate a great amount of haze over the region at that season of the Martian year.
We may now go back to the very first rift, that of 1897. The Martian season grew later with each succeeding opposition, and it so chanced, abetted by this fact, that the delaying snow was never seen covering that part of the planet again and so, of course, not the rift. The Martian summer in those high latitudes came on, and with it brought the great arctic canal, the Jaxartes, into conspicuousness. The canal in consequence had been observed for some time before it proclaimed itself the apotheosis of a rift and that of the first and most important rift of all. Comparison of position, however, entirely confirmed the conjecture and added another and the most striking of all to the list.
These six canals, on the whole the largest which run into the northern cap, have thus a dual character. Starting originally as rifts, they later come out unmistakably as canals. So that we may say in general that the two phenomena are different seasonal states of the same thing. This instantly explains the rifts, the origin of which we found of so difficult, not to say impossible, interpretation before in these pages, and incidentally it confirms what we deduced on other grounds as the character of the canals; to wit, strips of vegetation. For if the cap covered desert and fertility alike, it is precisely over the latter that it would first melt.
Vegetation has the property of melting snow. The metabolism of the plant, like that of the animal, though in a less degree, generates caloric. A living animal is warm, even the so-called cold-blooded ones, in some sort, and a growing plant is too. The chemic processes concerned give off heat, though in such small quantities that we are often not aware of it. While the plant lies dormant it stays cold, but the moment its sap begins to run under the rays of the spring sun it rises in temperature above its winter surroundings. All it needs to this awakening is sun and water, and both it gets in its place in the polar cap after the passing of the vernal equinox. The time, therefore, is suitable, for it is not till after that equinox is passed that any of the above phenomena occur. In consequence the snow about it melts and the plants themselves show as dark rifts splitting the cap.
This quite unexpected identity of two seemingly diverse phenomena, and the unsolicited support its only explanation lends to the general theory, is an instance of what is constantly occurring as observation of the planet is pushed farther and farther. Facts every little while arise which prove to fit into place in the scheme when neither the facts nor their fitness could have been foreseen.
CHAPTER XXVII
OASES: KINEMATIC
Subject to change also are the oases; and in the same manner apparently as the canals. They grow less evident at a like season of the Martian year. They do this seemingly by decreasing in size. Whereas in the full expanse of their maturity they show as round spots of appreciable diameter, as the season wanes they contract to the smallest discernible of dots. All but the kernel, as it were, fades out, and even this may disappear from sight. The Phœnix Lake in its summer time is a very dark circular spot, small indeed yet of definite extension; in its winter it shrinks to a pin point, and is often not visible at all. Sometimes the husk apparently persists, a ghostlike reminiscence of what it was, with the kernel showing dark-pointed in its centre. Thus the Lucus Lunae appeared at the opposition of 1905. A faint wash betokened the presence of the Lucus, through which now and again a black pin-point pierced.