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Title:
Evidence for an ancient martian ocean in the topography of deformed shorelines
Authors:
Perron, J. Taylor; Mitrovica, Jerry X.; Manga, Michael; Matsuyama, Isamu; Richards, Mark A.
Affiliation:
AA(Department of Earth & Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA), AB(Department of Physics, University of Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A7, Canada), AC(Department of Earth & Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA), AD(Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington DC 20015, USA), AE(Department of Earth & Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA)
Publication:
Nature, Volume 447, Issue 7146, pp. 840-843 (2007). (Nature Homepage)
Publication Date:
06/2007
Origin:
NATURE
DOI:
10.1038/nature05873
Bibliographic Code:
2007Natur.447..840P

Abstract

A suite of observations suggests that the northern plains of Mars, which cover nearly one third of the planet's surface, may once have contained an ocean. Perhaps the most provocative evidence for an ancient ocean is a set of surface features that ring the plains for thousands of kilometres and that have been interpreted as a series of palaeoshorelines of different age. It has been shown, however, that topographic profiles along the putative shorelines contain long-wavelength trends with amplitudes of up to several kilometres, and these trends have been taken as an argument against the martian shoreline (and ocean) hypothesis. Here we show that the long-wavelength topography of the shorelines is consistent with deformation caused by true polar wander-a change in the orientation of a planet with respect to its rotation pole-and that the inferred pole path has the geometry expected for a true polar wander event that postdates the formation of the massive Tharsis volcanic rise.
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