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Published March 2004 | public
Journal Article

A distinct class of avalanche scars on Mars

Abstract

We report observations of a set of surface features on Mars that form a distinct class of avalanche scars. These features have a horizontal scale of hundreds of meters, but a depth scale of meters distinguishes them from the shallower features known as slope streaks. The meters-thick avalanche scars have escaped previous attention because of weak contrast between the interiors of the scarred regions and their surroundings. Often the most visible feature is a shadow cast by the trough wall, a band 1–3 pixels wide in Mars Orbiter Camera narrow angle images, indicating maximum depths of 4–10 m. We investigate the morphology of more than 500 such features. Slopes upon which the avalanches occur average about 27°. Impact craters are seen at the heads of some avalanche scars; this subset exhibits statistically wider opening angles. The scars span an estimated several Ma in age. Those found so far occurred mainly in the Olympus Mons lower aureole. We compare shapes of slope streaks to shapes of meters-thick avalanches, and the results support the notion that the two classes are distinct. The newly-discovered avalanches resemble some terrestrial flows of loose, dry material such as dry snow and glass beads. On the basis of these analogs, we suggest a physical model.

Additional Information

© 2003 Elsevier Inc. Received 26 July 2003; revised 10 November 2003. We acknowledge helpful reviews by Robert Sullivan and James Dohm, and useful comments by Bruce Murray, Bill Dietrich, Dave McClung, and Adrian Daerr. This research was supported by NASA's Mars Data Analysis Program, grant # NAG5-13232.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023