On the spiral troughs of Mars

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2013-08

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Abstract

The north and south polar layered deposits (NPLD and SPLD respectively) of Mars are 2 – 3 km thick and mostly ice, comprising nearly all of the known water reserves on Mars. They are commonly believed to hold a detailed record of recent (~10 – 100 Myr) climate within their layers. Dominating the surface of the NPLD, intriguing spiral depressions called troughs, exhibit a pinwheel appearance. In late 2006, the Shallow Radar (SHARAD) instrument began making observations. SHARAD can detect internal structure within the PLD, making observations that are impossible with instruments that only inspect the surface. SHARAD data reveals a unique stratigraphic record associated with trough formation and migration. The troughs did not exist during deposition of the first half of NPLD accumulation but initiated some 1000 m below the current surface and have migrated as much as 100 km northward. Three processes are responsible for this migration: wind transport, insolation induced sublimation, and atmospheric deposition. I synthesize work from ground penetrating radar, optical imagery, established analogs, and atmospheric modeling in order to derive a process model that describes trough formation and evolution, including migration. The NPLD spiral troughs belong to a larger classification of features called cyclic steps, which can exist in either erosional or depositional environments. On the SPLD, troughs and a variety of other features exist. While SPLD features are more complex than NPLD troughs, they exist due to the same three processes.

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