Other
Scientific paper
May 2001
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2001agusm...v42a03k&link_type=abstract
American Geophysical Union, Spring Meeting 2001, abstract #V42A-03 INVITED
Other
5480 Volcanism (8450), 6207 Comparative Planetology, 6225 Mars, 8450 Planetary Volcanism (5480)
Scientific paper
In many ways, the high-resolution imaging of volcanic features on Mars has been disappointing due to the significantly degraded state of the ancient surfaces. One major exception has been the recent volcanism in the Cerberus Plains and Amazonis Planitia (Keszthelyi et al., 2000). Crater counts suggest some lava surfaces are less than 10 Ma (Hartmann and Berman, 2000), though rapid burial and very recent exhumation would allow for somewhat older eruptions. Investigation of the platy-ridged portion of the 1783-1784 Laki flow field in Iceland revealed that these lava flows have a morphology unlike any in Hawaii. We have called this form of lava "rubbly pahoehoe" and find it in several terrestrial flood basalt settings (Keszthelyi and Thordarson, 2000). Rubbly pahoehoe on Iceland and Mars transitions into undisrupted inflated pahoehoe flows at their margins. These flows are hypothesized to form as surges in flow rate travel through large inflating sheet flows. This allows emplacement underneath a thick mobile insulating crust, permitting lava to travel great distances in a rapid but laminar manner. Thermal modeling suggests eruption rates on the order of 105 m3/s feeding these sheets of lava, a rate about an order of magnitude larger than typical for terrestrial flood basalt eruptions. These huge eruptions potentially have significant climatic implications. If the dissolved volatile content of the Martian flood lavas were similar to that of large terrestrial basaltic eruptions (Thordarson and Self, 1996; McSween et al., 2001) we would expect on the order of 300 Gt of highly acidic gas to be released. Simultaneously, several thousand cubic kilometers of highly vesicular basaltic ash should be produced. Further gas release and ash production would come from the rootless cone fields found on the lavas (Lanagan et al., submitted). The acid-laced ash may be deposited to form the Medussae Fossae Formation and perhaps other finely layered sedimentary deposits seen on Mars. There is evidence from MOC and MOLA that recent floods of both water and lava originated from Cerberus Rupes, a fracture system which has been active very recently (it cuts the young lavas). This may be the very best place on Mars to search for current geothermal activity. Keszthelyi et al. (2000) JGR 105, 15027-15049. Hartmann and Berman (2000) JGR, 105, 15011-15025. Thordarson and Self (1996) JVGR 74, 49-73. Keszthelyi and Thordarson, (2000) GSA Ann. Meet. Abst. #5293. McSween, et al. (2001), Nature 409, 487-490. Lanagan et al., (submitted) GRL.
Keszthelyi Laszlo
McEwen Alfred
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