Published June 1, 2018 | Published
Journal Article Open

Substrate controls on valley formation by groundwater on Earth and Mars

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Abstract

Valleys with amphitheater-shaped headwalls on Mars have been used to constrain early martian hydrology and, importantly, have been interpreted as eroded from groundwater-fed springs, which might have constituted hospitable environments for life on ancient Mars. Groundwater-fed springs have carved valleys in rare examples on Earth; however, these valleys are in loose sandy sediments and weakly cemented sandstones, and it is unclear whether groundwater is also an effective erosion agent in the basaltic bedrock and boulders within martian valleys. Here we develop a theoretical model for the efficiency of valley formation by groundwater-seepage erosion, and we show that valley formation by groundwater is limited to narrow ranges in aquifer permeabilities and sediment sizes that are characteristic of loose or weakly consolidated sand. The model is validated against groundwater-carved valleys in loose sand in physical experiments and natural valleys on Earth. Applied to valleys near Echus Chasma, Mars, our model precludes a formation by seepage erosion due to the inferred basaltic bedrock; instead, the model implies that surface flows of water were required to form the valleys, with significant implications for the hydrology, climate, and habitability of ancient Mars.

Additional Information

© 2018 The Authors. Gold Open Access: This paper is published under the terms of the CC-BY license. Manuscript received 19 December 2017; Revised manuscript received 23 March 2018; Manuscript accepted 8 April 2018; Published: April 26, 2018. We thank the editor, M. Quigley, and R. Irwin, N. Mangold, and an anonymous reviewer for helpful reviews. This work was funded by NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship grant 12-PLANET12F-0071, National Science Foundation grant EAR-1529110, NASA grant NNX13AM83G, and a John Harvard Distinguished Science Fellowship to Lapotre.

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