抽象的な

The paleo-ocean of Mars

John E. Brandenburg


The Mars ocean hypothesis[1] proposed that the Northern Plains of Mars, approximately one third of Mars surface, was once covered by an ocean of liquid water. Given that the Northern Plains of Mars are the youngest portion of Mars surface- as evidenced by their sparse cratering relative to most of the planet’s surface- the Mars paleo-ocean appears to have endured for most of Mars geologic history in either liquid or solid form.[2][3][4] The paleo-ocean, named the “Malacandrian Ocean”[4] or “Oceanus Borealis,”[3] would have filled the Vastitas Borealis basin in the northern hemisphere of Mars, an area which lies 4–5 km (2.5–3 miles) below the mean planetary elevation. This would have begunat a time period of approximately 4.0 billion years ago. Evidence for this ocean includes geographic changes in the terrain smoothness at a common elevation, geomorphology that resembles ancient shorelines, and the chemical properties of the Martian soil and atmosphere in the Northern Plains region. Mars would have required a denser atmosphere and warmer climate to allow a liquid ocean to remain at the surface[5].


免責事項: この要約は人工知能ツールを使用して翻訳されており、まだレビューまたは確認されていません

インデックス付き

  • キャス
  • Google スカラー
  • Jゲートを開く
  • 中国国家知識基盤 (CNKI)
  • サイテファクター
  • コスモスIF
  • 電子ジャーナルライブラリ
  • 研究ジャーナル索引作成ディレクトリ (DRJI)
  • 秘密検索エンジン研究所
  • ICMJE

もっと見る

ジャーナルISSN

ジャーナル h-インデックス

Flyer

オープンアクセスジャーナル