Characteristics of basaltic lava flows on Venus
Abstract
Some ideas relating to the formation of lava flows on Venus are reviewed. The surface morphological features seen in the panoramic images made by the Venera 13 and 14 landers are examined in detail. The major element compositions measured by the Soviet probes indicate that the surface rocks at the Venera 13 site resemble a terrestrial tholeite composite whereas the Venera 14 rocks are similar to terrestrial alkali basalts. Few data exist on the rheological properties of such magma types on Earth; these properties are a strong function of magma volatile content, and there are important gaps in our knowledge of the typical volatiles to be associated with the magmas on Venus. However, the suggestion that Venusian magmas may be water poor together with consideration of the fact that the high Venusian surface temperatures may cause magmas to experience up to 50 K less cooling during their rise to the surface than corresponding terrestrial counterparts, leads to the finding that Venusian magmas may typically have plastic viscosities, E, up to a factor of three greater than terrestrial counterparts on eruption. A similar analysis of yield strength variations with temperature, magma composition and volatile content suggests that temperature will exert the main control and that Venusian magma yield strengths, Y, may be a factor of several times smaller than those of terrestrial equivalents.
- Publication:
-
Reports of Planetary Geology and Geophysics Program
- Pub Date:
- April 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985pggp.rept...97W
- Keywords:
-
- Basalt;
- Lava;
- Magma;
- Temperature Effects;
- Temperature Gradients;
- Venus (Planet);
- Venus Surface;
- Convection;
- Morphology;
- Planetary Surfaces;
- Viscosity