Chasma Australe, Mars: Structural Framework for a Catastrophic Outflow Origin
Abstract
Chasma Australe is the most remarkable of the martian south pole erosional reentrants carved in the polar layered deposits. Ms chasma originates near the south pole and runs across the polar troughs over a distance of about 500 km. Its width varies between 20 and 80 km and, with a depth up to 1000 m, it reaches the bedrock. Following an idea put forward originally for Chasma Boreale, we propose for the genesis of Chasma Australe a mechanism of catastrophic outflow preceded by a tectonically induced powerful sapping process. A detailed geomorphological analysis of Chasma Australe shows erosional and depositional features that can be interpreted as produced by the motion of a fluid. Like other polar reentrants, Chasma Australe is clearly assymetric, with a steep eastern margin where basal and lateral erosion prevailed, and a gentler western side, where the stepped topography and bedrock spurs favored deposition.
- Publication:
-
Mars Polar Science and Exploration
- Pub Date:
- January 1998
- Bibcode:
- 1998LPICo.953....1A
- Keywords:
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- Geomorphology;
- Mars (Planet);
- Mars Surface;
- Polar Regions;
- Topography;
- Landforms;
- Bedrock;
- Structural Properties (Geology);
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration