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Publications

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Surveying the South Pole-Aitken basin magnetic anomaly for remnant impactor metallic iron

The Moon has areas of magnetized crust ("magnetic anomalies"), the origins of which are poorly constrained. A magnetic anomaly near the northern rim of South Pole-Aitken (SPA) basin was recently postulated to originate from remnant metallic iron emplaced by the SPA basin-forming impactor. Here, we remotely examine the regolith of this SPA magnetic anomaly with a combination of Clementine and Lunar
Authors
Joshua T.S. Cahill, Justin Hagerty, David M. Lawrence, Rachel L. Klima, David T. Blewett

The birth and death of transverse aeolian ridges on Mars

Transverse aeolian ridges (TARs) are small bright windblown deposits found throughout the Martian tropics that stand a few meters tall and are spaced a few tens of meters apart. The origin of these features remains mysterious more than 20 years after their discovery on Mars. This paper presents a new hypothesis, that some of the TARs could be indurated dust deposits emplaced millions of years ago
Authors
Paul E. Geissler

Interannual observations and quantification of summertime H2O ice deposition on the Martian CO2 ice south polar cap

The spectral signature of water ice was observed on Martian south polar cap in 2004 by the Observatoire pour l'Mineralogie, l'Eau les Glaces et l'Activite (OMEGA) ( Bibring et al., 2004). Three years later, the OMEGA instrument was used to discover water ice deposited during southern summer on the polar cap ( Langevin et al., 2007). However, temporal and spatial variations of these water ice signa
Authors
Adrian J. Brown, Sylvain Piqueux, Timothy N. Titus

Provisional maps of thermal areas in Yellowstone National Park, based on satellite thermal infrared imaging and field observations

Maps that define the current distribution of geothermally heated ground are useful toward setting a baseline for thermal activity to better detect and understand future anomalous hydrothermal and (or) volcanic activity. Monitoring changes in the dynamic thermal areas also supports decisions regarding the development of Yellowstone National Park infrastructure, preservation and protection of park r
Authors
R. Greg Vaughan, Henry Heasler, Cheryl Jaworowski, Jacob B. Lowenstern, Laszlo P. Keszthelyi

Emplacement and erosive effects of the south Kasei Valles lava on Mars

Although it has generally been accepted that the Martian outflow channels were carved by floods of water, observations of large channels on Venus and Mercury demonstrate that lava flows can cause substantial erosion. Recent observations of large lava flows within outflow channels on Mars have revived discussion of the hypothesis that the Martian channels are also produced by lava. An excellent exa
Authors
Colin M. Dundas, Laszlo P. Keszthelyi

High manganese concentrations in rocks at Gale crater, Mars

The surface of Mars has long been considered a relatively oxidizing environment, an idea supported by the abundance of ferric iron phases observed there. However, compared to iron, manganese is sensitive only to high redox potential oxidants, and when concentrated in rocks, it provides a more specific redox indicator of aqueous environments. Observations from the ChemCam instrument on the Curiosit
Authors
Nina L. Lanza, Woodward W. Fischer, Roger C. Wiens, John P. Grotzinger, Ann M. Ollila, Ryan B. Anderson, Benton C. Clark, Ralf Gellert, Nicolas Mangold, Sylvestre Maurice, Stéphane Le Mouélic, Marion Nachon, Mariek E. Schmidt, Jeffrey Berger, Samuel M. Clegg, Olivier Forni, Craig Hardgrove, Noureddine Melikechi, Horton E. Newsom, Violaine Sautter

Hematite-bearing materials surrounding Candor Mensa in Candor Chasma, Mars: Implications for hematite origin and post-emplacement modification

The Valles Marineris canyon system on Mars is of enduring scientific interest in part due to the presence of interior mounds that contain extensive layering and water-altered minerals, such as crystalline gray hematite and hydrated sulfates. The presence of hematite and hydrated sulfate minerals is important because their host rock lithologies provide information about past environments that may h
Authors
Robin L. Fergason, Lisa R. Gaddis, A. D. Rogers

Sands at Gusev Crater, Mars

Processes, environments, and the energy associated with the transport and deposition of sand at Gusev Crater are characterized at the microscopic scale through the comparison of statistical moments for particle size and shape distributions. Bivariate and factor analyses define distinct textural groups at 51 sites along the traverse completed by the Spirit rover as it crossed the plains and went in
Authors
Nathalie A. Cabrol, Kenneth E. Herkenhoff, Andrew H. Knoll, Jack D. Farmer, Raymond E. Arvidson, E.A. Grin, Ron Li, Lori Fenton, B. Cohen, J.F. Bell, R. Aileen Yingst

The digital global geologic map of Mars: Chronostratigraphic ages, topographic and crater morphologic characteristics, and updated resurfacing history

A new global geologic map of Mars has been completed in a digital, geographic information system (GIS) format using geospatially controlled altimetry and image data sets. The map reconstructs the geologic history of Mars, which includes many new findings collated in the quarter century since the previous, Viking-based global maps were published, as well as other discoveries that were made during t
Authors
Kenneth L. Tanaka, S.J. Robbins, Corey M. Fortezzo, J.A. Skinner, Trent M. Hare

Brittle deformation and slope failure at the North Menan Butte tuff cone, Eastern Snake River Plain, Idaho

The manifestation of brittle deformation within inactive slumps along the North Menan Butte, a basaltic tuff cone in the Eastern Snake River Plain, is investigated through field and laboratory studies. Microstructural observations indicate that brittle strain is localized along deformation bands, a class of structural discontinuity that is predominant within moderate to high-porosity, clastic sedi
Authors
Chris H. Okubo

HiRISE observations of Recurring Slope Lineae (RSL) during southern summer on Mars

Recurring Slope Lineae (RSL) are active features on Mars that might require flowing water. Most examples observed through 2011 formed on steep, equator-facing slopes in the southern mid-latitudes. They form and grow during warm seasons and fade and often completely disappear during colder seasons, but recur over multiple Mars years. They are recognizable by their incremental growth, relatively low
Authors
Lujendra Ojha, Alfred McEwen, Colin M. Dundas, Shane Byrne, Sarah Mattson, James Wray, Marion Masse, Ethan Schaefer

ChemCam results from the Shaler Outcrop in Gale Crater, Mars

The "Shaler" outcrop in Gale crater is approximately 0.7 m thick and >20 m long, and exhibits multiple well-exposed platy and cross-stratified facies [1] interpreted to be primarily fluvial sandstone deposits. The outcrop is a part of the upper Glenelg member in the Yellowknife Bay (YKB) stratigraphic section [2]. Curiosity first encountered the "Shaler" outcrop on sol 121 of the mission, and retu
Authors
Ryan Bradley Anderson, L. Edgar, J.C. Bridges, A. Williams, J. Williams, A. Ollila, O. Forni, N. Mangold, N. Lanza, V. Sautter, S. Gupta, D. Blaney, B. Clark, G. Clegg, G. Dromart, O. Gasnault, J. Lasue, S. Le Mouélic, Richard Léveillé, E. Lewin, K. Lewis, S. Maurice, Marion Nachon, H. Newsom, D. Vaniman, R. C. Wiens