A new study provides the “strongest evidence yet” that salty liquid water sometimes flows on modern-day Mars, researchers said on Monday in a discovery that holds implications for future expeditions to the Red Planet.

“Our quest on Mars has been to ‘follow the water’ in our search for life in the universe, and now we have convincing science that validates what we’ve long suspected,” said John Grunsfeld, associate administrator at NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington, D.C. “This is a significant development, as it appears to confirm that water -- albeit briny -- is flowing today on the surface of Mars.”

"The discovery we’re going to talk about today really is most exciting because it suggests that it would be possible for there to be life today on Mars," Grunsfeld said.

Water on Mars, not just frozen. Is anything drinking it? Someday we wil find out on our #JourneyToMars http://t.co/ysbP8e2shY — John Grunsfeld (@SciAstro) September 28, 2015

Researchers from Georgia Tech led by doctoral candidate Lujendra Ojha used science tools aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter –- which has been circling Earth’s neighbor since 2006 –- to investigate streaks (or “recurring slope lineae”) that appear across parts of the planet during the warm seasons and disappear when it gets colder.

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The evidence suggests that the streaks are formed by salty water that comes and goes with the Martian seasons, the researchers found. The study was conducted with researchers from NASA Ames Research Center, Johns Hopkins’ Applied Physics Laboratory, the University of Arizona, the Southwest Research Institute and Laboratoire de Planétologie et Géodynamique de Nantes, and was published on Monday in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Read More: Martian Microbes? Ancient Lake Could Have Held Life, Rover Team Says

“Something is hydrating these salts, and it appears to be these streaks that come and go with the seasons,” Ojha said in a statement. “This means the water on Mars is briny, rather than pure. It makes sense because salts lower the freezing point of water. Even if RSL are slightly underground, where it’s even colder than the surface temperature, the salts would keep the water in a liquid form and allow it to creep down Martian slopes.”

Dark, narrow, 100 meter-long streaks called recurring slope lineae flowing downhill on Mars, inferred to have been formed by contemporary flowing water. - / NASA | JPL | UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA

The team used the orbiter’s Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer, which detects and identifies minerals on the planet’s surface.

Where this water could be coming from, researchers say they don’t know yet.

“The origin of water forming the RSL is not understood,” they wrote in their study. “Water could form by the surface/subsurface melting of ice, but the presence of near-surface ice at equatorial latitudes is highly unlikely.”

We now have a way to understand better how life *might* survive. Think of it as how to ask the right question more than anything else. — HiRISE (@HiRISE) September 28, 2015

Using tools from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and other probes, scientists have been poring over data from Mars for years looking for evidence that water might be flowing on the planet’s surface today. Experiments conducted by the Curiosity rover mission reported in 2013 that an area called Yellowknife Bay might once have been a huge 30-mile-long lake that could have made a nice home for microbes –- but that was probably something like 3.6 billion years ago.

Read More: Opportunity Rover Finds Traces Left By 'Water You Can Drink' on Ancient Mars

Earlier that same year, the team behind the Opportunity rover found evidence that the planet had once had non-acidic water, the kind “you can drink.”

Other NASA findings have indicated that a Martian ocean might once have had more water than the Arctic Ocean. But it will probably be a while before Curiosity or a different or new probe heads in the direction of one of these salty streaks looking for extraterrestrial life.

NASA takes special steps to make sure it cleans the equipment it sends to points outside Earth to cut down on the microbes that cling to everything from our planet, said Grunsfeld, and aims for areas where scientists think they are least likely to contaminate existing life if any exists. The briny streaks, which may or may not be habitable, also tend to be in areas that would be difficult for rovers to access -- for now.