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A Volcanic Origin for Sinuous and Branching Channels on Mars: Evidence from Hawaiian AnalogsObservations of sinuous and branching channels on planets have long driven a debate about their origin, fluvial or volcanic processes. In some cases planetary conditions rule out fluvial activity (e.g. the Moon, Venus, Mercury). However, the geology of Mars leads to suggestions that liquid water existed on the surface in the past. As a result, some sinuous and branching channels on Mars are cited as evidence of fluvial erosion. Evidence for a fluvial history often focuses on channel morphologies that are unique from a typical lava channel, for instance, a lack of detectable flow margins and levees, islands and terraces. Although these features are typical, they are not necessarily diagnostic of a fluvial system. We conducted field studies in Hawaii to characterize similar features in lava flows to better define which characteristics might be diagnostic of fluvial or volcanic processes. Our martian example is a channel system that originates in the Ascraeus Mons SW rift zone from a fissure. The channel extends for approx.300 km to the SE/E. The proximal channel displays multiple branches, islands, terraces, and has no detectable levees or margins. We conducted field work on the 1859 and 1907 Mauna Loa flows, and the Pohue Bay flow. The 51-km-long 1859 Flow originates from a fissure and is an example of a paired a a and pahoehoe lava flow. We collected DGPS data across a 500 m long island. Here, the channel diverted around a pre-existing obstruction in the channel, building vertical walls up to 9 m in height above the current channel floor. The complicated emplacement history along this channel section, including an initial a a stage partially covered by pahoehoe overflows, resulted in an appearance of terraced channel walls, no levees and diffuse flow margins. The 1907 Mauna Loa flow extends > 20 km from the SW rift zone. The distal flow formed an a a channel. However the proximal flow field comprises a sheet that experienced drainage and sagging of the crust following the eruption. The lateral margins of the proximal sheet, past which all lava flowed to feed the extensive channel, currently display a thickness of < 20 cm. Were this area covered by a dust layer, as is the Tharsis region on Mars, the margins would be difficult to identify. The Pohue Bay flow forms a lava tube. Open roof sections experienced episodes of overflow and spill out. In several places the resultant surface flows appear to have moved as sheet flows that inundated the preexisting meter scale features. Here the flows developed pathways around topographic highs, and in so doing accreted lava onto those features. The results are small islands within the multiple branched channels that display steep, sometimes overhanging walls. None of these features alone proves that the martian channel networks are the result of volcanic processes, but analog studies such as these are the first step towards identifying which morphologies are truly diagnostic of fluvial and volcanic channels.
Document ID
20120016925
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Bleacher, Jacob E.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
deWet, Andrew
(Franklin and Marshall Coll. Lancaster, PA, United States)
Garry, W. Brent
(Planetary Science Inst. Tucson, AZ, United States)
Zimbelman, James R.
(National Air and Space Museum Washington, DC, United States)
Date Acquired
August 25, 2013
Publication Date
April 19, 2012
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
GSFC.ABS.6760.2012
Report Number: GSFC.ABS.6760.2012
Meeting Information
Meeting: AGU Chapman Conference on Atmospheric Water Vapor and Its Role in Climate
Location: Kona, HI
Country: United States
Start Date: August 20, 2012
End Date: August 24, 2012
Sponsors: American Geophysical Union
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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