To start with we
have a super volcano maintaining its stack as a demonstrator. It makes excellent sense that other such volcanos
did emerge and after venting most of their mass as ash, they typically collapsed
to leave huge craters.
Mars is much
smaller than earth and a number of huge volcanos is realistic during the early
epochs and represents the way in which Mars recycled material and lost
heat. I do not expect to find much
indication of a working plate tectonic model here.
This also
explains the apparent uniqueness of Olympus Mons. These stacks likely built up uniquely and collapsed
setting the stage for another stack to be built up. That makes Olympus Mons merely the last such
arising at the end of the process when sufficient heat had been lost to set up
a stable base.
Suggestion of
supervolcanoes on Mars ignites controversy
by Staff Writers
Greenbelt, Md. (UPI) Oct 2, 2013
Some of Mars' deep craters were actually ancient
supervolcanoes that may have changed the planet's climate, U.S. and British
researchers suggest.
Jacob Bleacher of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
and colleague Joseph Michalski of the Planetary Science Institute and London's
Natural History Museum say several irregularly shaped craters in Mars'
Arabia Terra region have a structure similar to supervolcanoes on Earth.
One of them, Eden Patera, is more than a mile deep
and around 43 miles wide.
Such geological features suggest the existence of
ancient supervolcanoes that could have spewed ash over wide areas Mars and
perhaps affected its early climate, they said, although they acknowledge not
all geologists agree with them.
"Yes, there is some resistance to the
idea," Michalski told NBC News in an email. "That is perfectly
natural for a totally new idea."
Billions of years ago, Martian supervolcanoes could
have discharged hundreds of cubic miles' worth of magma until the surface
around the volcanoes collapsed, leaving deep, irregular craters behind,
Michalski and Bleacher suggested.
While other geologists consider meteor impacts the
more likely source of the craters, Michalski and Bleacher maintain their
features don't fit the criteria for impact craters.
They don't have well-defined rims or evidence of
impact debris, the two say, and are too deep to fit the profile for eroded
ancient impact craters.
In a paper published in the journal Nature,
Michalski and Bleacher say they've identified five possible supervolcanoes and
suggest more might be found elsewhere on Mars.
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