HiPOD: Sunday, 8 November 2020
Ridges and Grooves That Wave and Buckle on a Valley Floor

Ridges and Grooves
Long linear ridges and grooves curve, wave, and buckle across most of this image. Here, as elsewhere on Mars, these linear ridges and grooves fill a valley floor, hence their name, “lineated valley fill.”

Because these features are only found in valleys in the middle latitudes (30 to 60 degrees) of the northern and southern hemispheres, scientists had long suspected that they were associated with some ancient climate that had prevailed in that latitudinal band. Based on peering beneath the surface using radar, scientists now think that lineated valley fill is probably merely a rocky veneer atop a glacier of nearly pure ice! The rocks that make up the linear ridges and grooves were oriented by the ancient flow of the glacier underneath.

ID: ESP_026414_2205
date: 15 March 2012
altitude: 297 km

https://uahirise.org/hipod/ESP_026414_2205
NASA/JPL-Caltech/UArizona
#Mars #science #NASA

Black & white is less than 5 km across; enhanced color is less than 1 km. For full observation details, visit the ID link.