It might be a bit difficult, but try imagining Mars with vast oceans and raging rivers, and why not, perhaps even touches of green vegetation from place to place. If somehow you can place that image into your head, hold on to it, as it is nothing but a glimpse into the history of the planet.
Look all you want, you’ll not find the name Ogre’s Bowl on any maps of Mars that you can find. Sure, the place is real, but like most other places on the planet, it doesn’t go by the Google translation of its Latin name, which would be Orcus Patera. It could also be translated as Hell’s Plate, but we like the Ogre name more, so we stuck with that.
Picking a place on Mars for hardware to land is a thing space agencies take very seriously. Just as a properly-built machine could mean the difference between the success of the mission and its failure, so does the landing site.
Although a reliable source of inexhaustible interesting and revelatory images, the HiRISE camera that is orbiting Mars rarely sends back images of places that may become historically important for a potential human colony there.