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Precipitation and Aridity Constraints on Early Mars from Globally-Distributed Paleolakes

Authors :
Stucky De Quay, G
Goudge, T. A
Fassett, C. I
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2020.

Abstract

The widespread occurrence of fluvio-lacustrine features on Mars support long-lived flow and accumulation of water in a warmer, wetter past. However, martian climate models have been unable to recreate the necessary conditions required to support a persistent wet climate. Orbital and in-situ data sets have revealed the existence of > 400 paleolakes on Mars, which can be subdivided into open- and closed-basin lakes. Open-basin lakes require that sufficient water accumulated to fill and overtop the basin-confining topography, providing a minimum constraint on required water volumes. Conversely, closed-basin lakes provide maximum water volumes since the absence of an outlet breach generally implies they did not overflow. Importantly, a subset of both open- and closed-basin lakes are fed by valley networks inferred to have been sourced by precipitation during the era of valley network formation > 3.7 Ga and may be used to quantitatively constrain precipitation and aridity during early Mars.

Subjects

Subjects :
Space Sciences (General)

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20200001844
Document Type :
Report