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Dynamic Mars: Recent and Current Landscape Evolution of the Red Planet presents the latest observations, interpretations, and explanations of geological change at the surface or near-surface of this terrestrial body. These changes raise questions about a decades-old paradigm, formed largely in the aftermath of very coarse Mariner-mission imagery in the 1960s, suggesting that much of the interesting geological activity on Mars occurred deep in its past, eons ago. The book includes discussions of (1) Mars' ever-changing atmosphere and the impact of this on the planet's surface and near-surface; (2) the possible involvement of water in relatively new, if not contemporary, gully-like flows and slope streaks (i.e. recurring slope lineae); and (3) the identification of a broad suite of agents and processes (i.e. glacial, periglacial, aeolian, meteorological, volcanic, and meteoric) that are actively revising surface and near-surface landscapes, landforms, and features on a local, regional, and hemispheric scale.Highly illustrated and punctuated by data from the most recent Mars missions, Dynamic Mars is a valuable resource for all levels of research in the geological history of Mars, as well as of the three other terrestrial planets.
- Utilizes observational and model-based data as well as geological context to frame the understanding of the dynamic surface and near-surface of Mars
- Presents a broad spectrum of highly regarded experts and themes to discuss and evaluate the geological history of late and current Mars
- Includes extensive and detailed imagery to clearly illustrate these themes, discussions, and evaluations
Language
Place of publication
Publishing group
Elsevier Science & Techn.
ISBN-13
978-0-12-813019-3 (9780128130193)
Schweitzer Classification
Late Amazonian Epoch climate1. Orbital (climatic) forcing and its imprint on the global landscapeRecent surface water at/near the mid-latitudes?2. Unraveling the mysteries of recurring slope lineae (RSL)3. Gullies and their connection with the climate4. Recent fluvial-channels, -landforms and fresh shallow-valleys in the Olympus Mons lava plains
The Polar Regions5. Active geomorphological processes involving exotic agents6. CO2-driven geomorphological processes
Glacial and periglacial landscapes7. Paleo-periglacial and "ice-rich complexes in Utopia Planitia8. Bi-hemispheric (periglacial) mass wasting
Volcanism9. Volcanic disruption of recent ice-deposits in the Argyre Basin
Aeolian processes10. Dust devils: stirring up the surface11. Dark Dunes of Mars: An orbit-to-ground multidisciplinary perspective of aeolian science
Other surface-modification processes12. Modification of the surface by impact cratering13. Stone pavements, lag deposits, and contemporary landscape-evolution14. Karst landforms as markers of recent climate change: en example from the late Amazonian Epoch evaporite karst within a trough in western Noctis Labyrinthus