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The Systematic mapping of lava flow units in the Tharsis region has been compiled into a series of 16 maps at 1:2,000,000 scale. This work provides information on the sources and areal extent of the lava flows, on their eruptive sequences and relative ages, and on relations between the flows and geologic structure in the largest, most active tectonic and volcanic province on Mars. Some of the maps were made from controlled Viking photomosaics published as quarter quadrangles in the Atlas of Mars Topographic Series (U.S. Geological Survey, 1979) and tied to the Viking control net. Where these photomosaics were not available, larger scale catalog photomosaics tied to the Mariner 9 control net were used. These maps...
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The Systematic mapping of lava flow units in the Tharsis region has been compiled into a series of 16 maps at 1:2,000,000 scale. This work provides information on the sources and areal extent of the lava flows, on their eruptive sequences and relative ages, and on relations between the flows and geologic structure in the largest, most active tectonic and volcanic province on Mars. Some of the maps were made from controlled Viking photomosaics published as quarter quadrangles in the Atlas of Mars Topographic Series (U.S. Geological Survey, 1979) and tied to the Viking control net. Where these photomosaics were not available, larger scale catalog photomosaics tied to the Mariner 9 control net were used. These maps...
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Kasei Valles (fig. 1) make up the largest system of outflow channels on Mars and were a major contributor of water to Chryse Planitia. The walls and floors of the Kasei channels are terraced and grooved, closely resembling the channeled scablands of eastern Washington State that were formed by catastrophic floods probably lasting no more than a few days (Baker and Milton, 1974; Baker and Kochel, 1979). Evidence obtained from previous geologic mapping of parts of Kasei Valles (Chapman and Scott, 1989) was not conclusive as to whether water levels varied markedly during single flood and erosional event or whether flooding was episodic and marked by intermittent periods of scouring. This problem – whether one or several...
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This map shows the geology in and around potential early Apollo landing site 5 in the lunar equatorial belt. The Maestlin G region is in Oceanus Procellarum, about midway between the crater Kepler to the northeast and Flamsteed to the southwest. Terra materials occur only in the northeast corner of the region. Dark mare covers the remainder, and the entire region is crossed by rays from Kepler. The general geology of the larger Kepler region was mapped at a scale of 1:1,000,000 from telescopic photography (Hackman, 1962), and a 1:25,000 geologic map has been prepared of the landing site in the central part of the region (Titley and Trask, 1969).
The Iapygia quadrangle, in the equatorial region of Mars just north of the Hellas basin, is mainly ancient, hilly, and cratered upland terrain. The southern one-third of the quadrangle is dominated by mountain and knobby materials representing mountains of pre-Hellas material and material related to the Hellas basin and mappable in a 500-km-wide zone circumjacent to it. The northeast quadrant of the quadrangle contains two large arcuate structural scarps and moderately low-albedo mountain material and knobby deposits, both associated with formation of the Isidis basin (Meyer and Grolier, 1977). The major part of the Iapygia quadrangle is mapped as hilly and cratered upland materials units with subordinate various...
Tags: Geology, Iapygia, Mars
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The Phaethontis quadrangle of Mars is dominated by densely cratered uplands and plateaus which form some of the oldest surfaces on the planet. Extensive low-lying areas within the cratered terrains, including the floors of large craters, are covered to different degrees by plains-forming material. The youngest plains units surround Tharsis Montes to the north. Various erosional processes, including eolian scour and possibly scarp retreat through volatile-release sapping and mass wasting, have modified martian terrains in the northwestern part of the quadrangle, producing several distinctive physiographic features: knob and mesa terrains, plains with small knobs, and plateaus dissected by furrows, steep-walled gorges,...
The Systematic mapping of lava flow units in the Tharsis region has been compiled into a series of 16 maps at 1:2,000,000 scale. This work provides information on the sources and areal extent of the lava flows, on their eruptive sequences and relative ages, and on relations between the flows and geologic structure in the largest, most active tectonic and volcanic province on Mars. Some of the maps were made from controlled Viking photomosaics published as quarter quadrangles in the Atlas of Mars Topographic Series (U.S. Geological Survey, 1979) and tied to the Viking control net. Where these photomosaics were not available, larger scale catalog photomosaics tied to the Mariner 9 control net were used. These maps...
The Systematic mapping of lava flow units in the Tharsis region has been compiled into a series of 16 maps at 1:2,000,000 scale. This work provides information on the sources and areal extent of the lava flows, on their eruptive sequences and relative ages, and on relations between the flows and geologic structure in the largest, most active tectonic and volcanic province on Mars. Some of the maps were made from controlled Viking photomosaics published as quarter quadrangles in the Atlas of Mars Topographic Series (U.S. Geological Survey, 1979) and tied to the Viking control net. Where these photomosaics were not available, larger scale catalog photomosaics tied to the Mariner 9 control net were used. These maps...
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The Mare Boreum geologic map portrays the north polar are of Mars above lat 65° N. The area contains five physiographic provinces: (1) a residual ice cap characterized by troughs with a counterclockwise outward spiral pattern (Mariner 9 frames DAS 13317550 and DAS 13353320); (2) layered terrain adjacent to the ice cap, exposed within the spiral troughs; (3) a circumpolar band of low-albedo material extending roughly from lat 75° to 82° N.; (4) isolated patches of high-albedo perennial ice near lat 75° N. within a semicircumpolar band between long 120° and 270°; and (5) circumpolar cratered plains of mottled albedo south of lat 75° N.
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The east Mangala Valles area merits detailed geologic study because it contains several small channels whose ages can be determined relative to geologic units that range in age from early (Noachian) to late (Amazonian) periods of Martian history. Because small channels are of three ages and geomorphic types, their study increases our understanding of the continuity of fluvial processes in the evolutionary history of Mars. For these reasons, part of the area is a candidate site for a sample return mission to Mars.
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The Bach region encompasses the south polar part of Mercury poleward of lat 65° S. About half of the region was beyond the terminator during the three Mariner 10 encounters and hence not visible. The entire mapped area was covered by near-vertical photography from the second encounter, and the eastern part, from long 15° to about 110°, was covered by oblique photography from the first encounter.
Relative ages of structures and geologic units have been determined from intersection and apparent overlap relations and from morphologic freshness reflecting degree of prevention. The fivefold crater-age sequence is based on the classification of Shoemaker and Hackman (1962). and corresponds broadly to a modified classification of Pohn and Offield (1970) and Offield (1971). Rock units in the quadrangle are provisionally correlated with time-stratigraphic units first described in and near the Imbrium (Shoemaker, 1962 a,b; Shoemaker and Hackman, 1962, Shoemaker and others, 1963) and subsequently recognized elsewhere on the nearside of the Moon.


map background search result map search result map (ORB II-13 (100)) Geologic map of the Maestlin G region of the moon, Lunar Orbiter site II P-13, Oceanus Procellarum, including Apollo landing site 5 Map showing lava flows in the southeast part of the Memnonia Quadrangle of Mars Map showing lava flows in the northwest part of the Thaumasia Quadrangle of Mars Geologic maps of science study site 1A, East Mangala Valles, Mars Geologic map of the MTM 25057 and 25052 quadrangles, Kasei Valles region of Mars (ORB II-13 (100)) Geologic map of the Maestlin G region of the moon, Lunar Orbiter site II P-13, Oceanus Procellarum, including Apollo landing site 5 Geologic maps of science study site 1A, East Mangala Valles, Mars Geologic map of the MTM 25057 and 25052 quadrangles, Kasei Valles region of Mars Map showing lava flows in the southeast part of the Memnonia Quadrangle of Mars Map showing lava flows in the northwest part of the Thaumasia Quadrangle of Mars