Aeolian dune sediment flux heterogeneity in Meridiani Planum, Mars

•Sand dunes across central Meridiani Planum, Mars were examined for aeolian activity.•Dunes were studied in high-resolution HiRISE images and topography.•All sites show evidence for activity, many sites showed bulk dune migration (∼54%).•Substantial geographic and temporal heterogeneity of dune cres...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aeolian research 2017-06, Vol.26, p.73-88
Hauptverfasser: Chojnacki, Matthew, Urso, Anna, Fenton, Lori K., Michaels, Timothy I.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Sand dunes across central Meridiani Planum, Mars were examined for aeolian activity.•Dunes were studied in high-resolution HiRISE images and topography.•All sites show evidence for activity, many sites showed bulk dune migration (∼54%).•Substantial geographic and temporal heterogeneity of dune crest fluxes was observed.•Annual measurements show some dune crest fluxes can vary by a factor of five.•Host craters’ parameters were compared with activity revealing notable trends. It is now known unambiguously that wind-driven bedform activity is occurring on the surface of Mars today, including early detections of active sand dunes in Meridiani Planum’s Endeavour crater. Many of these reports are only based on a few sets of observations of relatively isolated bedforms and lack regional context. Here, we investigate aeolian activity across central Meridiani Planum and test the hypothesis that dune sites surrounding Endeavour crater are also active and part of region-wide sediment migration driven by northwesterly winds. All 13 dune fields investigated clearly showed evidence for activity and the majority exhibited dune migration (average rates of 0.6m/Earth-year). Observations indicate substantial geographic and temporal heterogeneity of dune crest fluxes across the area and per site. Locations with multiple time steps indicate dune sand fluxes can vary by a factor of five, providing evidence for short periods of rapid migration followed by near-stagnation. In contrast, measurements at other sites are nearly identical, indicating that some dunes are in a steady-state as they migrate. The observed sediment transport direction was consistent with a regional northeasterly-to-northwesterly wind regime, revealing more variations than were appreciated from earlier, more localized studies. Craters containing shallow, degraded, flat-floored interiors tended to have dunes with high sediment fluxes/activity, whereas local kilometer-scale topographic obstructions (e.g., central peaks, yardangs) were found to be inversely correlated with dune mobility. Finally, the previous, more limited detections of dune activity in Endeavour crater have been shown to be representative of a broader, region-wide pattern of dune motion.
ISSN:1875-9637
2212-1684
DOI:10.1016/j.aeolia.2016.07.004