Northern Meridiani Etched Terrain and Hematite Plains Contact
NASA/JPL-Caltech/UArizona
Northern Meridiani Etched Terrain and Hematite Plains Contact
PSP_002324_1815  Science Theme: Geologic Contacts/Stratigraphy
This observation shows the contact between the hematite bearing plains and etched terrain in northern Meridiani Planum.

The hematite bearing plains (exposed at the bottom left of the full image) are dark, smooth and full of dune fields. This unit is laterally extensive and the same unit that the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity was sitting on about 400 kilometers to the southwest (in 2007). Based on observations by Opportunity, this unit is interpreted to be a thin aeolian (wind-blown) mantle of basaltic sand and hematite concretions sitting on the etched terrain.

The etched terrain in this image is split into two units. The darker unit at the top of the image is filling in an approximately 120 kilometer NW-SE trending valley, while the brighter etched terrain in the middle of the image is stratigraphically and topographically higher than the lower etched terrain in the valley. This upper etched terrain is a plateau-forming unit with a geomorphic pattern that ranges from relatively flat plains to dissected plateaus and mesas. The lower etched terrain is flat with low albedo, and covered in dunes.

It is in these etched terrains that CRISM, and previously OMEGA, have detected hydrated sulfates, which makes a sedimentary origin seems most likely for these layered deposits of etched terrain found in Meridiani.



Written by: Jennifer Griffes  (14 February 2007)
 
Acquisition date
24 January 2007

Local Mars time
15:41

Latitude (centered)
1.471°

Longitude (East)
-0.181°

Spacecraft altitude
270.9 km (168.3 miles)

Original image scale range
27.1 cm/pixel (with 1 x 1 binning) so objects ~81 cm across are resolved

Map projected scale
25 cm/pixel and North is up

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Equirectangular

Emission angle
1.9°

Phase angle
53.4°

Solar incidence angle
55°, with the Sun about 35° above the horizon

Solar longitude
172.1°, Northern Summer

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North azimuth:  97°
Sub-solar azimuth:  9.1°
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POSTSCRIPT
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif., manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, Washington. The HiRISE camera was built by Ball Aerospace and Technology Corporation and is operated by the University of Arizona.