Abstract

The tallest volcano in the solar system, Olympus Mons on Mars, is bordered by at least ten enormous sub-circular hummocky deposits forming a welded halo, termed the aureole. The aureole units (or simply aureoles), which are the deposits of landslides from Olympus Mons, have dramatically transformed the pristine size and shape of the volcanic edifice. Topographic data are used to determine the amount of collapsed material, and so reconstruct the original outline of Olympus Mons before the landslides took place, under the assumption that the edifice did not start failing until it had reached this maximum size. Due to post-aureole deposition on the eastern and southern flanks and to the uncertainty of the slippage level on the northern side, the reconstruction is sufficiently precise along the western and north-western Olympus Mons flank, it is more uncertain for the northern flank, while it is not feasible around the rest of the volcano.It appears that the radius along the western and north-western Olympus Mons before the collapse of the aureole landslides was approximately 200 km longer or more. The results show that the volume of the aureoles, even if enormous, is insufficient to fill the ideal conical edifice which would be obtained prolonging the Olympus Mons flanks with present slope angles. Thus, an overhang remains in the pre-aureole reconstructed Olympus Mons, which would also explain the onset of instability that led to the aureole collapse.Further, a drape deposit blanketing the southern Acheron Fossae ridge just at the front of the western (W) aureole landslide deposit and a fan-channel system carved on the same W aureole are investigated, and it is suggested that these morphologies have been emplaced in subaqueous setting. While the drape may indicate a landslide-thrust water splash akin to a tsunami deposit caused by the fast travelling W aureole landslide, the fan-channel system is similar to certain morphologies in the terrestrial oceans. A numerical model of the collapse of the western aureole unit in water shows final runouts on both Acheron ridge and Amazonis Planitia compatible with observations provided that the friction angle is extremely small, of the order of a tenth of degree. Simulations indicate that the W aureole could have reached Acheron Fossae ridge with velocities in excess of 100 m/s, which would explain the several tens of km long distance reached by the landslide-thrust tsunami deposit. In short, morphological and numerical lines of evidence would indicate a subaqueous origin for the largest, W aureole landslide.

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