Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1775129 | Icarus | 2008 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Arnus Vallis (AV) is a >300-km-long sinuous, rille located on the northeastern flank of the Syrtis Major volcano on Mars. Observational evidence presented here suggests that AV formed as an open lava channel that was at least partly incised into the pre-existing terrain. The lava source area consists of a sub-circular pit at the southwestern end of a 7-km-long straight section of channel. AV trends down slope from this source with an average bottom slope of 0.26% or 0.14°. Width varies from â¼1 km at the source to â¼0.6 km near the distal end, with a mean of 0.76 km. Depth decreases from â¼180 m at the source to â¼25 m near the distal end. The AV terminus is obscured by a large impact crater. We suggest that the material that flowed in AV must have been a relatively high temperature, low viscosity lava dynamically and perhaps compositionally similar to terrestrial komatiite or some lunar basalt lavas. If correct, this finding has implications for the mode of construction of Syrtis Major.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Space and Planetary Science
Authors
Michael L. Rampey, Ralph P. Harvey,