This is an image taken by the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on board ESA’s Mars Express of the Acheron Fossae region, an area of intensive tectonic (continental ‘plate’) activity in the past.
Acheron Fossae marks the northern edge of the Tharsis plateau. It is part of a network of extensional fractures that radiates outward from their central focus in the Tharsis ‘bulge’, a huge area of regional uplift where intensive volcanic activity occurred.
These curved ‘faults’ were caused in the process of this uplift: cracks in the crust formed when the hot material rising from deep in the mantle of Mars pushed the overlying ‘elastic’ lithosphere (surface layers of rock) upward.
When the distorting tensions became too strong, the brittle crust on top of the lithosphere broke along zones of weakness.
The image, from orbit 37, are dominated by these curved features, showing a highly fractured, faulted and deformed area in the central part of the Acheron Fossae.
The feature is situated at approximately 35º-40º North and 220º-230º East, about 1000 kms north of the large Olympus Mons volcano.
Credits: ESA/DLR/FU (G. Neukum)
Acheron Fossae marks the northern edge of the Tharsis plateau. It is part of a network of extensional fractures that radiates outward from their central focus in the Tharsis ‘bulge’, a huge area of regional uplift where intensive volcanic activity occurred.
Mars Tharsis Plateau |
When the distorting tensions became too strong, the brittle crust on top of the lithosphere broke along zones of weakness.
The image, from orbit 37, are dominated by these curved features, showing a highly fractured, faulted and deformed area in the central part of the Acheron Fossae.
The feature is situated at approximately 35º-40º North and 220º-230º East, about 1000 kms north of the large Olympus Mons volcano.
Credits: ESA/DLR/FU (G. Neukum)
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