Abstract
Analyzing the tectonics of planets and their satellites we use all the information available from the studies of the Earth and other celestial bodies such as the Moon, Mars and Mercury. An important condition in such analysis is naturally the scale of the phenomena compared. Most surface structures of Venus are known to have no direct analogues on the surface of the present Earth, with its global systems of mid-oceanic ridges, deep trenches and vast lithospheric plates. This might be due to the sharp differences in the present thermal regimes of the Earth and Venus. It has already been suggested in numerous papers that the key to the genesis of the Cytherean surficial structures must be looked for in the geodynamics of the Early Precambrian Earth. Such an approach appears very logical indeed since the rheology of the present Cytherean crust must be closer to that of the Precambrian rigid lithosphere of the Earth which is as if ‘floating’ in the low-viscous asthenosphere. An attempt has therefore been made to evaluate certain elements in the tectonics of Venus through the theological properties of its crust comparing structural formation in the low-viscous layers of the Earth crust in the Early Precambrian with data on the morphology of structures on the surface of Venus.
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