학술논문

Venus tesserae feature layered, folded, and eroded rocks
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 49(1):81-85
Subject
04|Extraterrestrial geology
Alpha Regio
Aphrodite Terra
arcuate features
basalts
chemical weathering
deformation
emissivity
erosion
exhumation
faults
folds
grabens
igneous rocks
imagery
layered materials
linear features
Magellan Program
morphology
normal faults
Ovda Regio
paleoatmosphere
patterns
planets
radar methods
sedimentary rocks
surface features
Tellus Tessera
terrains
terrestrial comparison
terrestrial planets
tesserae
thrust faults
Venus
volcanic rocks
weathering
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
Tesserae on Venus are locally the stratigraphically oldest units preserved on the planet. These regions are characterized by pervasive tectonic deformation including normal faults, grabens, thrust faults, and folds. In multiple tesserae, sets of (often highly) curved, parallel linear features are also present. These features strongly resemble terracing in layered volcanic or sedimentary sequences on Earth having arcuate or sinuous outcrop patterns that follow undulating topography. Should this analogy hold for Venus, then these outcrop patterns imply some erosion of the tessera units in which these strata occur; radar-dark materials filling proximal lows might be deposits of that eroded material. This outcrop pattern is seen in geographically dispersed tessera units, so the preservation of layering could be common for this terrain type. If so, then tesserae record the culmination of volcanic and/or sedimentary deposition, folding, and erosion-complex geological histories that should be considered in future studies of this enigmatic terrain.