Another active or recent volcanic vent on Mars?



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Topic: Science > Physics
User: "Robert Clark"
Date: 05 Mar 2005 08:48:45 AM
Object: Another active or recent volcanic vent on Mars?
In the post copied below I speculated that an image from Mars Express
might show a recent or active volcanic vent:
Portion of Valles Marineris.
http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/object/index.cfm?fobjectid=34528
The reason for this was that the dark deposit showed the material
being spread out in a fan shape. You would expect just wind blown dust
to blow straight out from the origin point. In other words the
wind-blown material should be no wider that the deposit it originates
from. When the wind-blown material grows significantly wider than its
origin, that suggests material is being ejected from the origin.
I was able to get a high resolution MGS image of the crater where the
dark material emanates from from the imaging public request site on
Msss.com:
Mesa with dark-toned material in chaotic terrain region.
http://www.msss.com/mars_images/moc/publicresults/2004/10/R22-00522p.gif
But this doesn't seem to resolve the issue of whether or not this is
an example of venting.
However, I found another example that might provide a stronger case
for venting:
Southern rim of Isidis Planitia basin (Released 11 April 2002)
http://themis.asu.edu/print-20020411a.html
Notice again the wind-blown material is fan shaped, which I argue is
suggestive of material being ejected from the surface. But what is
really suggestive of venting is the curved shape of the fan deposit.
This is strongly suggestive of material being ejected in the air then
swirling around due to high winds.
Anyone know of any high resolution MGS images of this area?
Bob Clark
===============================================================
From: Robert Clark (rgregoryclark@yahoo.com)
Subject: Re: Active volcanic vent on Mars?
Newsgroups: sci.astro, alt.sci.planetary, sci.geo.geology
Date: 2004-03-13 20:31:21 PST
Another similarity between the two images is that there appears to be
two separate streaks that are emanating from opposite sides of the
crater. That again could be due to light colored dust being blown to
cover the area nearest the crater. However, there is a separate
instance that suggests this is in fact due to venting of some kind.
In the southern polar regions there have been observed strange
spider-like forms in the region covered by a seasonal CO2 cover. These
branching spider-like ravines have been attributed by Kieffer et.al.
to venting of CO2 gas beneath a CO2 ice cover. Interestingly, in
support of this interpretation there were given some images of dark
fan-like spots emanating from craters that are seen in association
with the spiders. Many of these fan-like spots have that same
charactertic of two separate streaks emanating from opposite sides of
the crater. But they are interpreted as due to the CO2 jets venting to
the surface.
Example of the "spiders":
MOC narrow-angle image M11-00396
South Chasma Australe scarp
http://www.msss.com/moc_gallery/m07_m12/images/M11/M1100396.html
Example of the fan-like deposits:
MOC narrow-angle image M07-03150
sample
http://www.msss.com/moc_gallery/m07_m12/images/M07/M0703150.html
Discussions of the spiders and fan-like deposits:
BEHAVIOR OF SOLID CO2 ON MARS: A REAL ZOO. Hugh H. Kieffer, U. S.
Geological Survey [Emeritus], Flagstaff, AZ
86001, USA, (hkieffer@******.net).
Sixth International Conference on Mars (2003) 3158.pdf
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/sixthmars2003/pdf/3158.pdf
ANNUAL PUNCTUATED CO2 SLAB-ICE AND JETS ON MARS. H. H. Kieffer, U.S.
Geological Survey,
2255 N. Gemini Dr., Flagstaff, AZ 86001
Mars Polar Science 2000 4095.pdf
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/polar2000/pdf/4095.pdf
Sublimation of Mars's southern seasonal CO2 ice cap and the
formation of spiders.
Sylvain Piqueux, Shane Byrne, and Mark I. Richardson
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of
Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 108, NO. E8, 5084,
doi:10.1029/2002JE002007, 2003
http://www.gps.caltech.edu/~shane/2002JE002007.pdf
Bob Clark
rgregoryclark@yahoo.com (Robert Clark) wrote in message
news:<832ea96d.0402212306.324b99c@posting.google.com>...

Here's an analogous image in a different area taken by Mars Odyssey.
The color combinations were done by Keith Laney:

http://www.keithlaney.com/colormars/V04437003color.jpg

The individual THEMIS filter images are here:

http://themis-data.asu.edu/img/V04437003.html

This image raises another possible explanation for why there is a

gap

between the dark material and the crater. In this Mars Odyssey image
it looks like lighter dust has been blown from the crater to cover

the

area immediately adjacent to it.
The same may be the case in the Mars Express image. However, in both
these cases the dark material still appears to emanate from the
crater. And there is a widening of the dark material away from the
crater. For a case of simple wind blown dust, the width of the dark
streak should stay about the same.


Bob Clark

===============================================================
.

User: "Uncle Al"

Title: Re: Another active or recent volcanic vent on Mars? 05 Mar 2005 01:05:41 PM
Robert Clark wrote:


In the post copied below I speculated that an image from Mars Express
might show a recent or active volcanic vent

[sbip]
And there's a Martian trapped in a coal seam right next to it, with an
iPod stuck in his third ear.
--
Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf
.
User: "robert casey"

Title: Re: Another active or recent volcanic vent on Mars? 05 Mar 2005 01:19:34 PM


And there's a Martian trapped in a coal seam right next to it, with an
iPod stuck in his third ear.

No doubt listening to the "Martian Hop" or "Martian Boogie" ;-)
.

User: "DrPostman"

Title: Re: Another active or recent volcanic vent on Mars? 05 Mar 2005 04:49:50 PM
On Sat, 05 Mar 2005 11:05:41 -0800, Uncle Al <UncleAl0@hate.spam.net>
in accordance with The Prophecy scribed:

Robert Clark wrote:


In the post copied below I speculated that an image from Mars Express
might show a recent or active volcanic vent

[sbip]

And there's a Martian trapped in a coal seam right next to it, with an
iPod stuck in his third ear.

Obviously listening to Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars.
--
DrPostman USPS, MBMC, BsD; "Disgruntled, But Unarmed"
Member,Board of Directors, afa-b, SKEP-TI-CULTŪ #15-51506-253.
AFA-B Official Pollster & Hammer of Thor winner - August 2004
You can email me at: DrPostman(at)gmail.com
"Fart for freedom, fart for liberty, and fart proudly."
-Benjamin Franklin
.



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