Reading Passage 3

CANALS ON MARS

A. Popular interest in Mars, the ‘Red Planet’, is long-established but has enjoyed two dramatic flowerings, one in the 1890s and the other a century later.

B. Any speculation about life on Mars, then or now, is part of a long discussion on the plurality of worlds’ Pluralists believe that there are other worlds apart from ours which contain life- an idea that had its origins in classical Greece. In the 19th century, the new science of astrophysics suggested that large numbers of stars in the sky were similar to the sun in their composition-perhaps the two were circled by planetary systems. Nearer to home Mars, our neighbor in the solar system, seemed to offer the evidence the pluralists had lacked until then.

C. The characteristics of Mars’ orbit are such that its distance from Earth varies considerably – from 34.5 to 234.5 million miles. From an astronomer’s standpoint it was particularly well-placed for observation in 1877, 1892 and 1909. Observations in each of these years intensified discussion about possible life on Mars.

D. If life, intelligent of otherwise, were to be found on Mars then life on Earth would not be unique. The scientific, theological and cultural outcomes of such a discovery could be stupendous. In 1859, Fr. Angelo Secchi, director of the Vatican observatory and a confirmed pluralist, observed markings on the surface of Mars which he described as canali, ‘channels’. The fateful word had been launched on its career, although there was little immediate development from Secchi’s work.

E. In 1877 another Italian, Giovanni Schiaparelli, one of Europe’s most distinguished astronomers, also observed the canali, but he added the refinement that they appeared to be constituents of a system. Other astronomers observed features that might be continents or seas; Schiaparelli confirmed these findings and gave them finely sonorous classical names such as Hellas, Mare Erythraeum, Promethei Sinus.

F. Although Schiaparelli was cautious in his public statements, recent research suggests that he was pluralist. Certainly his choice of familiar place names for the planet, and his publicizing of the canali network, encouraged pluralist speculation. Inevitably, canali was soon being translated into English as canals’ rather than ‘channels’. In 1882 Schiaparelli further fuelled speculation by discovering twin canals, a configuration which he named ‘gemination’; he described no fewer than sixty canals and twenty geminations.

G. Some of Schiaparelli’s findings were confirmed by the astronomers Perrotin and Thollon at Nice Observatory in 1886. In 1888 however, Perrotin confused matters by announcing that the Martian continent of ‘Libya’ observed by Schiaparelli in 1886 ‘no longer exists today’. The confusion grew’ two prestigious observatories in the US found in one case no canals, in another a few of them but no geminations, and no changes to Libya.

H. While the observers exchanged reports and papers; the popularizes got to work. They were generally restrained at first. The British commentator Richard Proctor thought that the canals might be rivers; he was among the first to suggest that a Martian canal would have to be ‘fifteen or twenty miles broad’ to be seen from Earth. The leading French pluralist, Camille Flammarion, published his definitive La Planete Mars in 1892: ‘the canals may be due….. to the rectification of old rivers by the inhabitants for the purpose of the general distribution of water….. Other commentators supposed the ‘canals’ might be an optical illusion, a line first advanced by the English artist Nathaniel Green, teacher of painting to Queen Victoria and an amateur astronomer.

I. The canals debate might have leveled off at this point had it not been for the incursion of its most prominent controversialist – and convinced pluralist – Percival Lowell. Lowell, an eminent Bostonian, entered the astronomical argument after a career in business and diplomacy, mainly in the Orient. He may not have brought an entirely objective mind to the task. Even before he started observing he had announced that the canals were probably ‘the work of some sort of intelligent beings’.

J. The newly-arrived popular press was very willing to report Lowell’s findings and views; canal mania grew apace. By 1910 Lowell had reported over 400 canals with an average length of 1,500 miles. He wrote plausibly about the Martian atmosphere and the means by which the canals distributed water from Mars’ polar caps to irrigate the planet before evaporation returned moisture to the poles. This water cycle appealed to popular evolutionism which perceived Mars as old, dying world trying to avert its fate by rational and large scale engineering – this was, after all, an age of great canals Panama, Dortmund-Ems, Manchester and Corinth.