Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1781202 Planetary and Space Science 2013 16 Pages PDF
Abstract
Fluvial channels in the southwestern portion of the trough incise surface slopes at 4-6° and lack obvious sources. The channels display first and second order tributaries arranged in a parallel pattern and may have formed by localized surface discharge from melting snow and/or ice. Both opal and gypsum occur in close proximity in the southwestern region of the trough, but gypsum is found alone in the southeast and opal in association with Al-clays is found to the northwest. We do not believe gypsum and opal formed coevally because they are not always found together, they require different aqueous conditions (i.e., opaline deposits require high silica availability while the gypsum deposits require high Ca availability in solution), and they appear at stratigraphically distinct levels. Although we identified evidence for fluvial landforms within the trough, cross-cutting relations indicate their incision post-dates deposition of the opal and pre-dates deposition of the gypsum. Hence, several periods of aqueous activity and alteration likely occurred within the trough from the Late Hesperian into the Amazonian that reflect favorable localized conditions within the Noctis Labyrinthus region and may be contemporaneous with late aqueous activity occurring elsewhere on Mars.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geophysics
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