Answer:Hola TvT
Explanation:When the Martian polar caps were first viewed through telescopes, most scientists believed that they were made of water ice, like the polar caps on Earth. Like Earth, Mars has a North and South Pole. But while Earth's polar ice caps consist solely of water ice, Mars' polar caps are a combination of water ice and carbon dioxide ice. As the Martian seasons change, the carbon dioxide ice sublimates (vaporizes) in summer, revealing the surface, and freezes again in winter. As fall approaches, in each respective hemisphere, clouds begin to form over the polar region and the ice cap begins to grow. In spring, the polar caps recede...........Aside from ice, Mars' polar regions have some interesting geologic features. The north polar dune field is a vast concentration of sand dunes that stretches around the entire north polar cap. In some areas, the sand measures up to 500 km (300 miles) across. When the dunes begin to thaw in spring, dark spots form on their surfaces. The north polar dunes were first seen during the 1972 mapping of Mars by Mariner 9, and they are identical to dunes in Earth's desert regions..
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