Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole

North and south of 30°N/S latitude a belt of ~40° with morphologies resembling terrestrial analogues in periglacial environments can be observed in high resolution imagery of the Mars Orbiter Camera. Among them, the small–scale polygonal features have a striking resemblance with ice–wedge polygons i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: van Gasselt, S., Reiss, D., Neukum, G.
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://elib.dlr.de/10955/
id ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:10955
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:10955 2023-05-15T16:37:47+02:00 Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole van Gasselt, S. Reiss, D. Neukum, G. 2004 http://elib.dlr.de/10955/ unknown van Gasselt, S. und Reiss, D. und Neukum, G. (2004) Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole. European Geosciences Union, I General Assembly, Nice, France, 25 - 30 April 2004. ISSN 1607-7962 Institut für Planetenforschung Konferenzbeitrag NonPeerReviewed 2004 ftdlr 2016-03-28T20:14:22Z North and south of 30°N/S latitude a belt of ~40° with morphologies resembling terrestrial analogues in periglacial environments can be observed in high resolution imagery of the Mars Orbiter Camera. Among them, the small–scale polygonal features have a striking resemblance with ice–wedge polygons in terrestrial permafrost regions. Nevertheless, their formation could not be unambiguously attributed to thermal contraction only and formation by e.g. desiccation has been proposed alternatively. The fresh appearance of polygon troughs, the low relief, seasonal CO2 frost infill as well as the absence of impact craters on the surface imply a recent formation and recent changes in their morphology. Seasonal observations near the south pole show a pattern of fissures in two subsequent Martian years which show major differences in their crack pattern. These data suggest thermal contraction cracking within a seasonal uppermost layer. The reactivation of older crack patterns and the development of higher–degree–racks as seen on Earth seem to be of minor importance. This observation strongly discourages the idea of subsurface ice wedges underneath these prominent fissure networks in several regions of the southern pole and might be due to seasonal surficial thermal contraction only. Below ~75°S the stability of liquid water and therefore thawing of the upper layer, is still questionable and modeling has been performed on a large scale only (Haberle et al., JGR, 2001). However, local thawing processes cannot be ruled out completely within troughs or in the vicinity of dunes, where temperatures and pressures my reach required values for thawing within the active layer. Still thermal contraction processes based on CO2 could be an alternative without analogues in terrestrial earth sciences. Conference Object Ice permafrost South pole wedge* German Aerospace Center: elib - DLR electronic library South Pole
institution Open Polar
collection German Aerospace Center: elib - DLR electronic library
op_collection_id ftdlr
language unknown
topic Institut für Planetenforschung
spellingShingle Institut für Planetenforschung
van Gasselt, S.
Reiss, D.
Neukum, G.
Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole
topic_facet Institut für Planetenforschung
description North and south of 30°N/S latitude a belt of ~40° with morphologies resembling terrestrial analogues in periglacial environments can be observed in high resolution imagery of the Mars Orbiter Camera. Among them, the small–scale polygonal features have a striking resemblance with ice–wedge polygons in terrestrial permafrost regions. Nevertheless, their formation could not be unambiguously attributed to thermal contraction only and formation by e.g. desiccation has been proposed alternatively. The fresh appearance of polygon troughs, the low relief, seasonal CO2 frost infill as well as the absence of impact craters on the surface imply a recent formation and recent changes in their morphology. Seasonal observations near the south pole show a pattern of fissures in two subsequent Martian years which show major differences in their crack pattern. These data suggest thermal contraction cracking within a seasonal uppermost layer. The reactivation of older crack patterns and the development of higher–degree–racks as seen on Earth seem to be of minor importance. This observation strongly discourages the idea of subsurface ice wedges underneath these prominent fissure networks in several regions of the southern pole and might be due to seasonal surficial thermal contraction only. Below ~75°S the stability of liquid water and therefore thawing of the upper layer, is still questionable and modeling has been performed on a large scale only (Haberle et al., JGR, 2001). However, local thawing processes cannot be ruled out completely within troughs or in the vicinity of dunes, where temperatures and pressures my reach required values for thawing within the active layer. Still thermal contraction processes based on CO2 could be an alternative without analogues in terrestrial earth sciences.
format Conference Object
author van Gasselt, S.
Reiss, D.
Neukum, G.
author_facet van Gasselt, S.
Reiss, D.
Neukum, G.
author_sort van Gasselt, S.
title Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole
title_short Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole
title_full Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole
title_fullStr Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole
title_sort seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the martian south pole
publishDate 2004
url http://elib.dlr.de/10955/
geographic South Pole
geographic_facet South Pole
genre Ice
permafrost
South pole
wedge*
genre_facet Ice
permafrost
South pole
wedge*
op_relation van Gasselt, S. und Reiss, D. und Neukum, G. (2004) Seasonal changes of small-scale polygons near the Martian south pole. European Geosciences Union, I General Assembly, Nice, France, 25 - 30 April 2004. ISSN 1607-7962
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