Sinuous Ridge in Malea Planum
NASA/JPL/University of Arizona

Sinuous Ridge in Malea Planum
ESP_023578_1130  Science Theme: Landscape Evolution
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This area of Malea Planum is covered by bright dust and dark lines. These lines formed by swirling winds known as dust devils that move across the surface removing the dust cover and revealing the darker rock materials beneath.

In the lower half of this image there is a faint sinuous, broad bouldery unit. Although largely dust covered, this sinuous unit may mark the location of a stream that once flowed across the plains. The stream may have later been filled by a lava flow or other bouldery material that was more resistant to erosion than the surrounding terrains forming what is known as an inverted stream. Since this time dust has largely filled in this terrain.

Written by: Ginny Gulick   (12 October 2011)



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Acquisition date:07 August 2011 Local Mars time: 2:37 PM
Latitude (centered):-66.715 degrees Longitude (East):57.683 degrees
Range to target site:250.1 km (156.3 miles)Original image scale range:25.0 cm/pixel (with 1 x 1 binning) so objects ~75 cm across are resolved
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