Interpretation of the northern boundary of Ishtar Terra from Magellan images and altimetry
Abstract
Part of the controversy on the origin of western Ishtar Terra (IT) concerns the nature of Uorsar Rupes (UR), the northern boundary of IT. In the hypothesis of lithospheric convergence and underthrusting, UR is held to be the main boundary thrust fault at the toe of an accretionary wedge. A topographic rise parallel to the scarp was interpreted as a flexural bulge similar to those of terrestrial subduction zones, and quantitative models of this feature seemed broadly consistent with the expected lithospheric structure of Venus. In the alternative mantle upwelling hypothesis for western IT, the outer margins of the highland are thought to be collapsing, and UR has been interpreted as a normal fault. Herein, Magellan images and altimetry are interpreted for this region and the hypothesis that a flexural signature can be distinguished is reassessed. The Magellan images of IT show evidence of crustal shortening adjacent to UR, but extension and burial dominate northwards. Altimetric profiles display the same long wavelength trends visible in Venera data, but no clear evidence of the lithospheric flexure. A model of regional extension and burial is herein favored, but regional compression cannot be ruled out.
- Publication:
-
A Bibliography of Planetary Geology and Geophysics Principal Investigators and their Associates, 1990 - 1991
- Pub Date:
- June 1991
- Bibcode:
- 1991pggp.rept...44M
- Keywords:
-
- Altimetry;
- Geological Faults;
- Lithosphere;
- Subduction (Geology);
- Venus Surface;
- Convergence;
- Planetary Crusts;
- Planetary Evolution;
- Topography;
- Upwelling Water;
- Venera Satellites;
- Venus (Planet);
- Wedges;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration