4.5 Article

Small Volcanic Vents of the Tharsis Volcanic Province, Mars

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 126, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JE006620

Keywords

distributed volcanism; Mars; monogenetic; morphology; Tharsis; volcanology

Funding

  1. NASA Mars Data Analysis Program [NNX14AN02G]
  2. NASA [80GSFC17M0002]
  3. NASA's Planetary Science Division Internal Scientist Funding Program through the Goddard Instrument Field Team (GIFT) work package

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Distributed-style volcanism generates clusters of small volcanoes by isolated magma bodies ascending from broad magma sources, helping to infer unobserved geological phenomena. The Tharsis Volcanic Province on Mars covers approximately one-quarter of the planet's surface and contains numerous small volcanoes formed through distributed volcanism.
Distributed-style volcanism is an end member of terrestrial volcanism that produces clusters of small volcanoes when isolated magma bodies ascend from broad magma source regions. Volcano clusters can develop over millions of years, one volcano at a time, and can be used to infer unobserved geologic phenomena, including subsurface stresses and cracks during eruption periods. The Tharsis Volcanic Province covers approximately one-quarter of the martian surface and hosts a large concentration of small volcanoes that formed from distributed volcanism. We present a catalog of 1,106 small volcanic vents identified within Tharsis Volcanic Province. This catalog includes morphologic measurements for each cataloged vent. Vent lengths range from 71 m to 51 km, widths range from 40 m to 3.1 km, and 90% of vents have lengths at least 1.5 times their widths. Additionally, 90% of edifices associated with vents have topographic prominences <100 m. Vents are found throughout Tharsis, though they generally form clusters near large volcanoes or among large graben sets. Older regions with volcanic eruption ages of >1 Ga are found at the Tharsis periphery in the Tempe-Mareotis region and Syria Planum. Vents in the Tharsis interior have reported ages <500 Ma. Regional trends in vent orientation and intervent alignment are dependent on nearby central volcanoes and fossae. We use these findings to hypothesize that within the most recent 500 Ma, magma was present under and to the east of the Tharsis Montes and that some of this magma erupted and built hundreds of small volcanoes in this region.

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