Title of article :
Evidence of volcanic and glacial activity in Chryse and Acidalia Planitiae, Mars
Author/Authors :
Martيnez-Alonso، نويسنده , , Sara and Mellon، نويسنده , , Michael T. and Banks، نويسنده , , Maria E. and Keszthelyi، نويسنده , , Laszlo P. and McEwen، نويسنده , , Alfred S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
Chryse and Acidalia Planitiae show numerous examples of enigmatic landforms previously interpreted to have been influenced by a water/ice-rich geologic history. These landforms include giant polygons bounded by kilometer-scale arcuate troughs, bright pitted mounds, and mesa-like features. To investigate the significance of the last we have analyzed in detail the region between 60°N, 290°E and 10°N, 360°E utilizing HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment) images as well as regional-scale data for context. The mesas may be analogous to terrestrial tuyas (emergent sub-ice volcanoes), although definitive proof has not been identified. We also report on a blocky unit and associated landforms (drumlins, eskers, inverted valleys, kettle holes) consistent with ice-emplaced volcanic or volcano-sedimentary flows. The spatial association between tuya-like mesas, ice-emplaced flows, and further possible evidence of volcanism (deflated flow fronts, volcanic vents, columnar jointing, rootless cones), and an extensive fluid-rich substratum (giant polygons, bright mounds, rampart craters), allows for the possibility of glaciovolcanic activity in the region.
rms indicative of glacial activity on Chryse/Acidalia suggest a paleoclimatic environment remarkably different from today’s. Climate changes on Mars (driven by orbital/obliquity changes) or giant outflow channel activity could have resulted in ice-sheet-related landforms far from the current polar caps.
Keywords :
Surface , Mars , Mars , geological processes