Abstract
AbstractIntegrated analyses of Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) IR, Context Camera (CTX), and Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) data sets have been used to characterize the western flank of the Martian volcano Alba Mons, which hosts a prominent population of lava tube systems. Identification and mapping of lava tube systems is based on both morphologic and topographic analyses, including the presence of chains of collapse depressions and elongate, sinuous ridges. Lava tubes and adjacent tabular lava flows with lengths of 100+ km form an extensive lava flow field. Analyses of topographic data sets, including slope maps, suggest continuity of the radial flow field pattern across the full western flank. Concurrent surface activity across the western flank is consistent with age constraints from geologic mapping and crater size‐frequency distributions that indicate Early Amazonian ages. The mapped population of 331 lava tube systems in the western flank geologic map quadrangle has a mean length of 36.2 km and a total length of ∼12,000 km. Individual lava tube systems extend up to ∼400 km. Orientation and slope data for lava tube systems show small deviations compared to regional values in 50‐km grid cells defined by the MOLA Digital Elevation Model, suggesting a strong coupling of lava tubes to the current slopes of Alba Mons. Mapping of lava tube systems documents segments both showing collapse and with no collapse, indicating the potential for extensive subsurface cavities that would be important astrobiological targets.
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