Age of fracturing and mesa development in the Elysium area, northern Martian plains.
Abstract
One of the fundamental questions of Martian crustal history is the origin of the crustal dichotomy between northern plains and southern highlands. Hypotheses for the origin of the dichotomy may be constrained by global scale, geophysical considerations, or by detailed geological studies of the genesis and relative ages of materials and landforms in the northern plains of Mars and along the boundary between the plains and the highlands. This abstract summarizes progress on one aspect of a long-range geological study intended to constrain hypotheses for the dichotomy by tracing the history of the northern plains from the most recent events backward -- essentially the same approach used to understand old events in Earth history. Both the giant impact and the mantle convection models for the crustal dichotomy imply a major coeval fracturing event. As has been known for some time, the present dichotomy boundary lies well south of its original position, at least in some places. Nevertheless, there is severe fracturing of this present dichotomy boundary in many places. The specific objectives of this study are to determine the ages of fracturing along the present dichotomy boundary.
- Publication:
-
NASA Tech. Memo., NASA TM-89810
- Pub Date:
- May 1987
- Bibcode:
- 1987pggp.rept..489M
- Keywords:
-
- Fracturing;
- Geochronology;
- Mars Surface;
- Mesas;
- Planetary Mantles;
- Craters;
- Crustal Fractures;
- Dichotomies;
- Geological Surveys;
- Impact Damage;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration;
- Mars Surface:Early History