EARLY HIRISE OBSERVATIONS OF ATHABASCA VALLES, MARS: A VOLCANIC LANDSCAPE
The High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera, onboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft, has acquired dozens of images of Athabasca Valles, many as stereo pairs. These images have excellent signal-to-noise ratios and pixel dimensions as small as 27 cm. The HiRISE data show that Athabasca Valles is a lava-draped channel system. Low-viscosity lava first flooded its channels, then drained downstream, deflating and draping the banks and floor of Athabasca Valles. The aforementioned transverse dunes exhibit lava surface textures rather than rounded boulders; the longitudinal lineations are terraces draped by lava, which grade into chains of hydrovolcanic (rootless) cones and craters. These hydrovolcanic constructs formed after deflation reduced the confining pressure enough for steam to vent through the lava. The available HiRISE data show no unambiguous channel erosion features that are unmodified by volcanism. Even the inferred high-stand of the floodwaters is demarcated by lobate lava flow margins. This suggests that either a bank-full lava flow overprinted the flood features or Athabasca Valles was carved by lava. We continue to investigate this conundrum.
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