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Bladed Terrain on Pluto: Possible Origins and EvolutionsPluto's Bladed Terrain (centered roughly 20 deg N, 225 deg E) covers the flanks and crests of the informally named Tartarus Dorsa with numerous roughly aligned blade-like ridges oriented approx. North-South; it may also stretch considerably farther east onto the non-close approach hemisphere but that inference is tentative. Individual ridges are typically several hundred meters high, and are spaced 5 to 10 km crest to crest, separated by V-shaped valleys. Many ridges merge at acute angles to form Y-shape junctions in plan view. The principle composition of the blades themselves we suspect is methane or a methane-rich mixture. (Methane is spectroscopically strongly observed on the optical surfaces of blades.) Nitrogen ice is very probably too soft to support their topography. Cemented mixtures of volatile and non-volatile ices may also provide a degradable but relief supporting "bedrock" for the blades, perhaps analogous to Callisto. Currently we are considering several hypotheses for the origins of the deposit from which Bladed Terrain has evolved, including aeolian disposition, atmospheric condensation, updoming and exhumation, volcanic intrusions or extrusions, crystal growth, among others. We are reviewing several processes as candidate creators or sculptors of the blades. Perhaps they are primary depositional patterns such as dunes, or differential condensation patterns (like on Callisto), or fissure extrusions. Or alternatively perhaps they are the consequence of differential erosion (such as sublimation erosion widening and deepening along cracks), variations in substrate properties, mass wasting into the subsurface, or sculpted by a combination of directional winds and solar isolation orientation. We will consider the roles of the long-term increasing solar flux and short periods of warm thick atmospheres. Hypotheses will be ordered based on observational constrains and modeling to be presented at the conference.
Document ID
20170000007
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Moore, Jeffrey M.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
Howard, Alan D.
(Virginia Univ. Charlottesville, VA, United States)
Umurhan, Orkan M.
(Universities Space Research Association Moffett Field, CA, United States)
White, Oliver L.
(Universities Space Research Association Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Schenk, Paul
(Lunar and Planetary Inst. Houston, TX, United States)
Beyer, Ross A.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
McKinnon, William B.
(Washington Univ. Saint Louis, MO, United States)
Spencer, John R.
(Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, CO, United States)
Singer, Kelsi N.
(Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, CO, United States)
Grundy, William N.
(Lowell Observatory Flagstaff, AZ, United States)
Nimmo, Francis
(California Univ. Santa Cruz, CA, United States)
Young, Leslie Ann
(Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, CO, United States)
Stern, Alan
(Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, CO, United States)
Weaver, Harold A., Jr.
(Johns Hopkins Univ. Laurel, MD, United States)
Olkin, Catherine
(Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, CO, United States)
Smith, Kimberly Ennico
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
Collins, Geoffrey C.
(Wheaton Coll. Norton, MA, United States)
Date Acquired
January 3, 2017
Publication Date
December 12, 2016
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
ARC-E-DAA-TN35651
Meeting Information
Meeting: AGU 2016 Fall Meeting
Location: San Francisco, CA
Country: United States
Start Date: December 12, 2016
End Date: December 16, 2016
Sponsors: American Geophysical Union
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNH15CO48B
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
methane
PlutoaEuro(TM)s Bladed Terrain
Tartarus Dorsa
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