Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4677027 | Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2014 | 12 Pages |
•We report nine locations in/around the Argyre impact basin where putative hydraulic pingos occur.•On Earth, these perennial (ice-cored) mounds evolve in periglacial/pro-glacial landscapes•These landscapes exhibit the freeze-thaw cycling of water at or near the surface.•Geological traits consistent with this are observed at the putative pingo sites.
We report the observation of possible (hydraulic) open-system pingos (OSPs ) at the mid latitudes (∼37°∼37°S) in and around the Argyre impact-basin. OSPs are perennial (water)–ice cored mounds; they originate and evolve in periglacial and pro-glacial landscapes on Earth where intra- or sub-permafrost water under hydraulic/artesian pressure uplifts localised sections of surface or near-surface permafrost that then freezes in-situ. We invoke three lines of evidence in support of our analogue-based interpretation: (1) similarities of shape, size and summit traits between terrestrial OSPs and the Martian mounds; (2) clustered distribution and the slope-side location of the mounds, consistent with terrestrial permafrost-environments where OSPs are found; and, (3) spatially-associated landforms putatively indicative of periglacial and glacial processes on Mars that characterise OSP landscapes on Earth.This article presents five OSP candidate-locations and nests these mound locations within a new geological map of the Argyre impact-basin and margins. It also presents three periglacial hypotheses about the possible origin of the water required to develop the mounds. Alternative (non-periglacial) formation-hypotheses also are considered; however, we show that their robustness is not equal to that of the periglacial ones.