Abstract

Hillslopes up to 11 km in height can be found along the walls of the Valles Marineris troughs. The widest and deepest troughs are grabens, in which tectonics probably exerted the primary control on the wall morphology. Geographical variations in the wall morphology and profiles show that they result from complex, persistent tectonic influences, and that significant changes in erosional processes occurred during this evolution, from late Hesperian to late Amazonian. Preliminary calculations suggest that about 85–95% of the fault-controlled wall relief probably formed in an “ancient” stage prior to this transitional period. A study of the volatile content of the wall rocks, based upon the morphology and distribution of impact craters on the surrounding plateaus, shows that extreme erosional widening of the Central Valles Marineris troughs occurred during the “ancient” stage of high ground ice content. During the subsequent “recent” stage of tectonic and morphological evolution, the wall materials were partly desiccated.

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