Paleolakes, paleofloods, and depressions in Aurorae and ophir Plana, Mars: Connectivity of surface and subsurface hydrological systems

被引:22
|
作者
Komatsu, Goro [1 ]
Di Achille, Gaetano [1 ]
Popa, Ciprian [2 ,3 ]
Di Lorenzo, Stefano [1 ]
Rossi, Angelo Pio [4 ]
Rodriguez, Jose Alexis Palmero [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Annunzio, Int Res Sch Planetary Sci, I-65127 Pescara, Italy
[2] Osserv Astron Capodimonte, I-80131 Naples, Italy
[3] Alexandru Ioan Cuza Univ, Dept Geol, Iasi 700506, Romania
[4] Int Space Sci Inst, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland
[5] Planetary Sci Inst, Tucson, AZ 85719 USA
关键词
Mars; surface; Geological processes; Mineralogy; MARTIAN OUTFLOW CHANNELS; GLACIAL LAKE MISSOULA; VALLES MARINERIS; MERIDIANI-PLANUM; THARSIS PROVINCE; CANDOR-CHASMA; LOW LATITUDES; KASEI VALLES; CRATER LAKES; FLUID-FLOW;
D O I
10.1016/j.icarus.2009.01.010
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
The plains of Aurorae and Ophir in the equatorial region of Mars display geomorphic evidence indicative of extensive but generally short-lived paleohydrological processes. Elaver Vallis in Aurorae Planum south of Ganges Chasma is an outflow channel system >180 km long, and here inferred to have formed by cataclysmic spillover flooding from a paleolake(s) contained in the Morella crater basin. Ganges Cavus is an enormous 5-km-deep depression of probable collapse origin located in the Morella basin. The fluid responsible for the infilling of the Morella basin likely emerged at least partially through Ganges Cavus or its incipient depression, and it may have been supplied also from small-scale springs in the basin. Similar paleohydrological processes are inferred also in Ophir Planum. It is reasonable to assume that water, sometimes sediment-laden and/or mixed with gases, was the responsible fluid for these phenomena although some of the observed features could be explained by non-aqueous processes such as volcanism. Water emergence may have occurred as consequences of ground ice melting or breaching of cryosphere to release water from the underlying hydrosphere. Dike intrusion is considered to be an important cause of formation for the cavi and smaller depressions in Aurorae and Ophir Plana, explaining also melting of ground ice or breaching of cryosphere. Alternatively, the depressions and crater basins may have been filled by regional groundwater table rising during the period(s) when cryosphere was absent or considerably thin. The large quantities of water necessary for explaining the paleohydrological processes in Aurorae and Ophir Plana could have been derived through crustal migration from the crust of higher plains in western Ophir Planum where water existed in confined aquifers or was produced by melting of ground ice due to magmatic heating or climatic shift, or from a paleolake in Candor Chasma further west. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:474 / 491
页数:18
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