Title: Pseudocraters as indicators of ground ice on Mars
Abstract: Positive identification of Martian pseudocraters would be a strong indication of past occurrence of ice at or near the surface of Mars. The basis for suggesting that small cones on Mars are pseudocraters includes: (1) small size, (2) abundant but patchy distribution on what appear to be volcanic plains, (3) presence of other features suggestive of surface or subsurface ice, (4) morphological similarities to Icelandic pseudocraters, and (5) the similarity in distribution of crater/cone diameter ratios to Icelandic pseudocraters. This last morphometric parameter may be the most important, since other possible small terrestrial volcanic analogs have very different crater/cone diameter ratio distributions. In a survey of the available high resolution Viking Orbiter imagery, abundant fields of possible pseudocraters were found. However, only a small fraction of the plains forming units imaged at high resolution were found to contain the small cones. This low discovery rate, combined with the limited high resolution imagery, restrict Martian pseudocraters as global indicators of surface or subsurface ice. The meanings of this terrain analysis are discussed.
Publication Year: 1987
Publication Date: 1987-05-01
Language: en
Type: article
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Cited By Count: 1
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