Ancient River Morphological Features on Mars

Ancient River Morphological Features on Mars versus Arizona’s Moenkopi Plateau

AN EARTH-ANALOG INVESTIGATION

ANTONIO J. PARIS & LAURENCE A. TOGNETTI

PLANETARY SCIENCES, INC.


 ABSTRACT

Mars is currently at the center of scientific debate regarding proposed ancient river morphological landscapes on the planet. An increased curiosity in the geomorphology of Mars and its water history, therefore, has led to an effort to better understand how those landscapes formed. Many studies, however, consist of patchwork investigations that have not thoroughly examined proposed ancient fluvial processes on Mars from an Earth-analog perspective. The purpose of this investigation, therefore, is to compare known fluvial features on Moenkopi Plateau with proposed paleopotamologic features on Mars. The search for analogs along the Moenkopi Plateau was due to the similarities in fluvial erosion, influenced and modified by eolian (wind) activity, primarily from Permian through Jurassic age. By analyzing orbital imagery from two cameras onboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) – the High-Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) and the Context Camera (CTX) – and paralleling it with imagery obtained from the U.S. Geological Survey and an unmanned aircraft operating over the Moenkopi Plateau, this investigation identified similar fluvial morphology. We interpret, therefore, that the same fluvial processes occurred on both planets, thereby reinforcing the history of water on Mars.

Approved by the Washington Academy of Sciences: 30 April 2020

Download Manuscript: Final_Ancient River Morphological Features on Mars_Paris