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by Staff Writers Berlin, Germany (SPX) Mar 06, 2020
The images shown here, which were acquired by the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on board ESA's Mars Express orbiter, reveal the impressive Moreux Crater on Mars. Glaciers have left their mark on the crater rim and floor, and have significantly altered the terrain. This striking view is complemented by a number of distinctive dark dunes. These formations bear witness to the influence of the prevailing wind systems. HRSC was developed and is operated by the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR). The systematic processing of the camera data was carried out at the DLR Institute of Planetary Research in Berlin-Adlershof. The image products shown here were created at the Department of Planetary Sciences and Remote Sensing at the Freie Universitat Berlin. Moreux Crater has a diameter of approximately 135 kilometres and is up to three-and-a-half kilometres deep. It is located in Protonilus Mensae, which lies on the Martian dichotomy boundary. The region has extensive deposits of ground ice, as well as surface ice and snow. The floor of the crater is mostly covered by dark dune fields, which are common on Mars.
Formed by glaciers ... Dating of these terrain forms has revealed that glacial and periglacial processes occurred here repeatedly during a period that lasted from approximately one billion to 400,000 years ago. Moreux Crater is situated at 41.6 degrees north, in the mid-latitudes of Mars, where glaciation processes occurred mainly when the axis of rotation of Mars was tilted at a greater angle than it is today (currently the inclination is 25.2 degrees) and the poles, with their ice caps, were tilted more directly towards to the Sun. Then, at mid-latitudes, more ice and snow from the atmosphere was deposited on crater edges and plateaus, where it collected and formed glaciers.
... and gone with the wind The dune fields in Moreux Crater show slight colour variations, possibly caused by differences in the composition of the dunes. The OMEGA spectrometer on Mars Express can be used to investigate the mineralogical composition of surface materials. The large contiguous dune field to the north of the central peak (right in Image 1) was found to have a significantly higher olivine content than the rest of the dunes, which are predominantly composed of pyroxene. In addition to the glacial formations, the crater also has aeolian formations that are visible in the different dune shapes. The most common type of dune is crescent-shaped (referred to as a barchan) which, when they grow together and merge, form barchanoidal ridges. The dune fields in Moreux Crater are made up of these ridges. Barchans are generally associated with limited sediment availability and a unimodal wind regime - this is, they are formed by wind that always blows from the same direction. However, orientation of the dunes varies in different regions of the crater, which indicates a complex system of prevailing wind directions. This is due to the specific topography of the crater and its central peak. The large barchanoidal dune field to the north of the central peak is primarily formed by winds from the northeast. At its southern end, winds from the northwest meet the dunes and create star dunes, which are typically formed by winds from different directions. If one follows the dune shapes counterclockwise from there, around the central peak, and uses them to discern the wind directions, the winds follow a semicircle. First, they come from the northwest, then the west, and later from the southwest until one reaches the eastern side of the dune ring (bottom of Image 1). Here, downdrafts from the west blowing from the slopes of the central peak meet winds from the east coming from the crater rim. The barchanoidal ridges change into transverse dunes at this point. Moreux Crater is thus a prime example of how local topography can influence wind flows and thereby have an indirect influence on morphological features.
Nilosyrtis Mensae - erosion on a large scale Munich, Germany (SPX) Feb 14, 2020 The northern and southern hemispheres of Mars differ fundamentally in terms of surface topography, age and morphology. In the north is an extensive lowland region that is relatively flat and much younger than the heavily cratered southern highlands. The transition zone between the two is characterised by a steep escarpment with an altitude difference of several kilometres. This region is referred to as the Martian dichotomy boundary. The Nilosyrtis Mensae region is referred to as 'fretted terrain' ... read more
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