Discontinuities in the shallow Martian crust at Lunae, Syria, and Sinai Plana.
Abstract
Detailed photoclinometric profiles across 125 erosional features and 141 grabens in the western equatorial region of Mars indicate the presence of three discontinuities within the shallow crust. Pits, troughs, and wall valleys (tributary canyons) within Noctis Labyrinthus and Valles Marineris and escarpments within the fretted terrain of Sacra Fossae and Kasei Valles show distinct erosional base levels at depths of 0.3-0.6 km, 1 km, and 2-3 km. The shallowest discontinuity corresponds to thickness estimates for the ridged plains unit in this region, and thus the discontinuity probably is the contact between a sequence of layered rock making up this unit and the underlying megaregolith. The 1-km discontinuity is reflected in the base levels of erosion of all the features studied, and it may correspond to the base of the proposed layer of ground ice. Model calculations using photoclinometric profiles of simple grabens (corrected for the effects of mass wasting) and the 60° dip of bounding faults (measured from the exposed traces of faults on trough walls) are presented and discussed.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Geophysical Research
- Pub Date:
- August 1990
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1990JGR....9514231D
- Keywords:
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- Erosion;
- Landforms;
- Mars Surface;
- Planetary Crusts;
- Discontinuity;
- Land Ice;
- Regolith;
- Stratigraphy;
- Topography;
- Mars: Geology;
- Mars Surface: Structure