Crater degradation in the Noachian highlands of Mars_ Assessing the hypothesis of regional snow and ice deposits on a cold and icy early Mars
نویسندگان
چکیده
The presence of valley networks and the highly degraded state of Noachian highland craters has led to the interpretation that Mars was once warmer and wetter. Recent climate models have suggested, however, that the extremely cold climate in the Noachian would be unlikely to support liquid water precipitation. The presence of a thicker atmosphere thermally coupled to the surface is predicted instead to concentrate surface snow and ice deposits in the higher-altitude southern highlands, producing a Late Noachian Icy Highlands (LNIH) characterized by hundreds of meters of relatively continuous ice cover. In this study we test this hypothesis by reevaluating the degradation state of Noachian highland craters to assess whether their degradation state might be attained in such a cold and icy climate. We review the characteristics of Amazonian-aged impact craters hypothesized to form in surface snow and ice layers (excess ejecta, EE; double-layered ejecta, DLE; and pedestal, Pd, craters) to provide the potential initial conditions of craters forming in Late Noachian surface snow and ice layers. We then examine modification processes active in the Amazonian that may have played a role in crater degradation in the Late Noachian. In addition, we examine the potential morphometric effects of impacting into a thick surface ice deposit, and the potential erosive effects of backwasting, top-down melting, basal ice melting, and atmospheric warming pulses on the morphology of Noachian highland craters. We find that several aspects of the highly degraded state of Noachian craters could be accounted for in the context of a cold and icy climate, and we outline further tests of the hypothesis. & 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
منابع مشابه
Glaciation in the Late Noachian Icy Highlands_ Ice accumulation, distribution, flow rates, basal melting, and top-down melting rates and patterns
Geological evidence for extensive non-polar ice deposits of Amazonian age indicates that the current cold and dry climate of Mars has persisted for several billion years. The geological record and climate history of the Noachian, the earliest period of Mars history, is less certain, but abundant evidence for fluvial channels (valley networks) and lacustrine environments (open-basin lakes) has b...
متن کاملSources of water for the outflow channels on Mars: Implications of the Late Noachian “icy highlands” model for melting and groundwater recharge on the Tharsis rise
From the Late Noachian period, through the Hesperian, and into the Amazonian periods on Mars, large outflow channels were formed. Many are interpreted to have originated through the catastrophic discharge of groundwater from martian aquifers, involving the release of up to millions of cubickilometers of water. Such a mechanism for outflow channel formation requires that martian aquifers were su...
متن کاملFirn densification in a Late Noachian ‘‘icy highlands’’ Mars: Implications for ice sheet evolution and thermal response
Recent modeling of a thicker early CO2 martian atmosphere and Late Noachian climate predicts that for pressures beyond a fraction of a bar, atmosphere-surface thermal coupling occurs, resulting in adiabatic cooling of high areas across Mars. This promotes the transport of water ice from relatively warmer lowlying areas to the highlands, where deposition and accumulation of water ice result in a...
متن کاملLATE NOACHIAN ICY HIGHLANDS CLIMATE REGIME: A HYDROLOGICAL SYSTEM CONCEPTUAL MODEL BASED ON THE McMURDO DRY VALLEYS
Introduction: In contrast to a " warm and wet " early Mars climate scenario [1,2], recent Late Noachian GCMs produce mean annual temperatures (MAT) well below 0°C. Above a few tens of millibars, atmospheric-surface coupling yields adiabatic cooling [3] and creates a highlands cold trap leading to a Late Noachian Icy Highlands (LNIH) climate model [4]. Melting to account for the abundant LN fluv...
متن کاملLava heating and loading of ice sheets on early Mars: Predictions for meltwater generation, groundwater recharge, and resulting landforms
Recent modeling studies of the early Mars climate predict a predominantly cold climate, characterized by the formation of regional ice sheets across the highland areas of Mars. Formation of the predicted “icy highlands” ice sheets is coincident with a peak in the volcanic flux of Mars involving the emplacement of the Late Noachian – Early Hesperian ridged plains unit. We explore the relationshi...
متن کامل