A distant NASA satellite has captured curious lines crossing a crater on Mars. For the research team of the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE), at the University of Arizona, in the United States, there is no doubt that these are natural traces left by the Martian dust devils .
“Dust devils on Mars form the same way they do on Earth,” HiRISE told Mashable. This happens when the ground becomes warmer than the air, warming the air above. Updrafts increase as cooler air descends, creating vertically flowing air. It should be noted that dust devils on Mars can be much larger than those on Earth.