Back to Search Start Over

Aram Dorsum: An Extensive Mid‐Noachian Age Fluvial Depositional System in Arabia Terra, Mars

Authors :
Joel Davis
Matthew R. Balme
Rebecca M. E. Williams
Peter Fawdon
Sanjeev Gupta
Peter Grindrod
John Bridges
Elliot Sefton-Nash
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. 125
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2020.

Abstract

A major debate in Mars science is the nature of the early Mars climate, and the availability of precipitation and runoff. Observations of relict erosional valley networks have been proposed as evidence for extensive surface run‐off around the Noachian‐Hesperian boundary. However, these valley networks only provide a time‐integrated record of landscape evolution and thus the timing, relative timescales and intensity of aqueous activity required to erode the valleys remain unknown. Here, we investigate an ancient fluvial sedimentary system in western Arabia Terra, now preserved in positive relief. This ridge, ‘Aram Dorsum’, is flat‐topped, branching, ~ 85 km long, and particularly well‐preserved. We show that Aram Dorsum was an aggradational alluvial system and that the existing ridge was once a large river channel‐belt set in extensive flood plains, many of which are still preserved. Smaller, palaeochannel‐belts feed the main system; their setting and network pattern suggest a distributed source of water. The alluvial succession is up to 60 m thick, suggesting a formation time of 105 to 107 years by analogy to Earth. Our observations are consistent with Aram Dorsum having formed by long‐lived flows of water, sourced both locally, and regionally as part of a wider alluvial system in Arabia Terra. This suggests frequent or seasonal precipitation as the source of water. Correlating our observations with previous regional‐scale mapping shows that Aram Dorsum formed in the mid‐Noachian, making it one of the oldest fluvial systems described on Mars and indicating climatic conditions that sustained surface river flows on early Mars.

Details

ISSN :
21699100 and 21699097
Volume :
125
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e16b4985a01f7a21126f567a9447a7ec