Equatorial layered deposits in Arabia Terra, Mars: Facies and process variability
2015
We investigated the equatorial layered
deposits (ELDs) of Arabia Terra, Mars, in
Firsoff crater
and on the adjacent plateau.
We produced a detailed geological map that
included a survey of the relative stratigraphic
relations and crater count dating. We reconstructed
the geometry of the layered deposits
and inferred some compositional constraints.
ELDs drape and onlap the plateau materials
of late Noachian age, while they are unconformably
covered by early and middle
Amazonian units. ELDs show the presence
of polyhydrated sulfates. The bulge morphology
of the Firsoff crater ELDs appears to be
largely depositional. The ELDs on the plateau
display a sheet-drape geometry. ELDs
show different characteristics between the
crater and the plateau occurrences. In the
crater they consist of mounds made of breccia
sometimes displaying an apical pit laterally
grading into a light-toned layered unit
disrupted in a meter-scale polygonal pattern.
These units are commonly associated
with fissure ridges suggestive of subsurface
sources. We interpret the ELDs inside the
craters as spring deposits, originated by fluid
upwelling through the pathways likely provided
by the fractures related to the crater
formations, and debouching at the surface
through the fissure ridges and the mounds,
leading to evaporite precipitation. On the
plateau, ELDs consist of rare mounds, flat-lying
deposits, and cross-bedded dune fields.
We interpret these mounds as possible
smaller spring deposits, the flat-lying deposits
as playa deposits, and the cross-bedded
dune fields as aeolian deposits. Groundwater
fluctuations appear to be the major factor
controlling ELD deposition.
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