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Bedrock Exhumed from the Deep

NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona2017-01-18

NASA

NASA
Washington, DC, United States

Roadside bedrock outcrops are all too familiar for many who have taken a long road trip through mountainous areas on Earth. Martian craters provide what tectonic mountain building and man's TNT cannot: crater-exposed bedrock outcrops.

Although crater and valley walls offer us roadside-like outcrops from just below the Martian surface, their geometry is not always conducive to orbital views. On the other hand, a crater central peak -- a collection of mountainous rocks that have been brought up from depth, but also rotated and jumbled during the cratering process -- produce some of the most spectacular views of bedrock from orbit.

This color composite cutout shows an example of such bedrock that may originate from as deep as 2 miles beneath the surface. The bedrock at this scale is does not appear to be layered or made up of grains, but has a massive appearance riddled with cross-cutting fractures, some of which have been filled by dark materials and rock fragments (impact melt and breccias) generated by the impact event. A close inspection of the image shows that these light-toned bedrock blocks are partially to fully covered by sand dunes and coated with impact melt bearing breccia flows.

http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA12291

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  • Title: Bedrock Exhumed from the Deep
  • Creator: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona
  • Date Created: 2017-01-18
  • Rights: JPL
  • Album: kboggs
NASA

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