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Title: EART160 Planetary Sciences


1
EART160 Planetary Sciences
Francis Nimmo
2
Last week crusts and impacts
  • Planetary crustal compositions may be determined
    by in situ measurements or remote sensing
    (spectroscopy)
  • Most planetary crusts are basaltic
  • Impact velocity will be (at least) escape
    velocity
  • Impacts are energetic and make craters
  • Crater size depends on impactor size, impact
    velocity, surface gravity
  • Crater morphology changes with increasing size
  • Crater size-frequency distribution can be used to
    date planetary surfaces
  • Atmospheres and geological processes can affect
    size-frequency distributions

3
This Week
  • Volcanism, tectonics and sedimentation
  • What controls where and when volcanism happens?
  • What kinds of tectonic features are observed on
    other planetary bodies, and what do they imply?
  • How are loads on planetary bodies supported?
  • What sedimentary features are observed?

Dont forget to look into summer undergraduate
research opportunities see the class website
4
Volcanism
  • Volcanism is an important process on most solar
    system bodies (either now or in the past)
  • It gives information on the thermal evolution and
    interior state of the body
  • It transports heat, volatiles and radioactive
    materials from the interior to the surface
  • Volcanic samples can be accurately dated
  • Volcanism can influence climate

5
Volcanoes
Hawaiian shield
Sif Mons (Venus) 2km x 300km Note vertical
exaggeration!
Olympus Mons, Mars
6
Dikes
Exhumed dikes (Mars Earth) Mars image width
3km MOC2-1249 Ship Rock, 0.5km high New Mexico
Radiating dike field, Venus
Dike Swarms, Mars and Earth
7
Lava tubes and rilles
Venus, lava channel? 50km wide image
Hadley Rille (Moon) 1.5km wide
Io, lava channel? Schenk and Williams 2004
8
Lava flows
Amirani lava flow, Io
500km
  • Dark flows are the most recent (still too hot for
    sulphur to condense on them)
  • Flows appear relatively thin, suggesting low
    viscosity

500km
Comparably-sized lava flow on Venus (Magellan
radar image)
9
Example - Mars
Hartmann et al. Nature 1999
Olympus
Ascraeus
Pavonis
Arsia
Although the Tharsis rise itself may be ancient,
some of the lavas are very young (lt20 Myr). We
infer this from crater counts (see last lecture).
So it is probable that Mars is volcanically
active now. How might we test this? (Very) recent
methane results?
The Tharsis rise contains enormous shield
volcanoes. Most of them are about 25km high. What
determines this height? What about their slopes?
10
Example - Io
  • Whats the exit velocity?
  • How do speeds like this get generated?
  • Volcanism is basaltic how do we know?
  • Resurfacing very rapid, 1cm per year

Loki
Pele
April 1997
July 1999
Sept 1997
Pillan
Galileo images of overlapping deposits at Pillan
and Pele
400km
Pele
11
Why does it happen?
Temperature
  • Material (generally silicates) raised above the
    melting temperature (solidus)
  • Increase in temperature (plume e.g. Hawaii)
  • Decrease in pressure (mid-ocean ridge)
  • Decrease in solidus temperature (island arcs)

Reduction in pressure
Increase in temperature
Depth
Normal temperature profile
liquidus
solidus
Reduction in solidus
  • Partial melting of (ultramafic) peridotite mantle
    produces (mafic) basaltic magma
  • More felsic magma (e.g. andesite) requires
    additional processes e.g. fractional
    crystallization

12
Eruptions
  • Magma is often less dense than surrounding rock
    (why?)
  • So it ascends (to the level of neutral buoyancy)
  • For low-viscosity lavas, dissolved volatiles can
    escape as they exsolve this results in gentle
    (effusive) eruptions
  • More viscous lavas tend to erupt explosively
  • We can determine maximum volcano height

h
What is the depth to the melting zone on
Mars? Why might this zone be deeper than on Earth?
d
rc
rm
13
Cooling timescale
  • Conductive cooling timescale depends on thickness
    of object and its thermal diffusivity k

cold
hot
  • Thermal diffusivity is a measure of how
    conductive a material is, and is measured in
    m2s-1
  • Typical value for rock/ice is 10-6 m2s-1

Temp.
d
  • Characteristic cooling timescale t d2/k
  • How long does it take a metre thick lava flow to
    cool?
  • How long to boil an egg?
  • How long does it take the Earth to cool?

14
Cryovolcanism
  • Cryovolcanism was predicted on the basis of
    Voyager images to occur on icy satellites, but it
    appears to be rare
  • Eruption of water (or water-ice slurry) is
    difficult due to low density of ice

This image shows one of the few examples of
potential cryovolcanism on Ganymede. The caldera
may have been formed by subsidence following
eruption of volcanic material, part of which
forms the lobate flow (?) within the caldera. The
relatively steep sides of the flow suggest a high
viscosity substance, possibly an ice-water slurry
(?).
Caldera rim
Lobate flow(?)
Schenk et al. Nature 2001
15
Tectonics
  • Global tectonic patterns give us information
    about a planets thermal evolution
  • Abundance and style of tectonic features tell us
    how much, and in what manner, the planet is being
    deformed i.e. how active is it?
  • Some tectonic patterns arise because of local
    loading (e.g. by volcanoes)

16
Extensional Tectonics
Valles Marineris, Mars (8km deep)
Craters on Ganymede
37km diameter
Pappalardo Collins 2005 Diam. appx 40km
Crater on Venus
17
Extension faulting
  • Extension accommodated by normal faulting

q0
Stretching factor
L0
q
L
  • Fault blocks rotate as extension proceeds
  • Typical normal faults start with dips of 60o and
    lock up when dips30o, giving stretching factor
    1.7
  • Stretching factor also controls amount of
    subsidence that happens during extension

18
A Martian Rift Valley
  • Looks similar to terrestrial continental rifts.
  • Not been heavily studied, but may provide useful
    insights into crustal properties.

Hauber and Kronberg, JGR Planets, 2001
19
Graben Systems
Steep scarp
Flat floor
Relay ramp?
Graben, Ganymede
Canyonlands graben, Utah, 2km across
across)
20
Bands (Europa)
20km
from Sullivan et al., Nature (1998)
What mechanism drives the extension?
21
Wrinkle Ridges and Lobate Scarps
  • Compressional features, probably thrust faults at
    depth (see cartoon)
  • Found on Mars, Moon, Mercury, Venus
  • Possibly related to global contraction due to
    cooling?
  • Spacing may be controlled by crustal structure

Mars, MOC wide-angle
Tate et al. LPSC 33, 2003
22
Io compressional tectonics
  • Burial leads to large compressive stresses due to
    change in radius
  • Stresses easily large enough to initiate faulting
  • Additional compressive stresses may arise from
    reheating the base of the crust

DR
After McKinnon et al., Geology 2001
stereo
Low-angle thrust faulting is probably responsible
for many of the mountain ranges seen on Io
550 km
10km
Schenk and Bulmer, Science 1998
23
Strike-slip Motion
Explain pull-apart better!
Europa, oblique strike-slip (image width 170km)
  • Relatively rare (only seen on Earth Europa)
  • Associated with plate tectonic-like behaviour

24
Mechanisms Compression
  • Silicate planets frequently exhibit compression
    (wrinkle ridges etc.)
  • This is probably because the planets have cooled
    and contracted over time
  • (think railway tracks)
  • Why do planets start out hot?
  • Further contraction occurs when a liquid core
    freezes and solidifies
  • Contractional strain given by

Hot mantle
Liquid core
Cool mantle
Where a is the thermal expansivity (3x10-5 K-1),
DT is the temperature change and the strain is
the fractional change in radius
Solid core
25
Stress and strain
  • For many materials, stress is proportional to
    strain (Hookes law) these materials are elastic
  • Stress required to generate a certain amount of
    strain depends on Youngs modulus E (large E
    means rigid)
  • You can think of Youngs modulus (units Pa) as
    the stress s required to cause a strain of 100
  • Typical values for geological materials are 100
    GPa (rocks) and 10 GPa (ice)
  • Elastic deformation is reversible but if strains
    get too large, material undergoes fracture
    (irreversible)

26
Mechanisms Extension
  • For icy satellites, one possible explanation for
    the ubiquitous extension is that they possess
    floating ice shells which thickened with time
    (see below)
  • Why should the shell thicken?

27
Tectonic Stresses Byerlees law
  • Byerlees law says that faults dont move unless
    the shear stress exceeds the normal stress times
    the friction coefficient f
  • For almost all geological materials, f0.6
    (unless the fault is lubricated somehow)

Shear stress
Normal stress
fault
  • In general, the normal stress is simply the
    overburden pressure
  • Prgh
  • The shear stresses are provided by tectonic
    effects
  • E.g. to cause a fault 10 km deep on Earth to move
    requires tectonic stresses of 3000 x 10 x 104 x
    0.6 180 MPa (a lot!)
  • Typical tectonic stresses on Earth are usually
    10-100 MPa
  • Why might Venus and Earth faults behave
    differently?

28
Flexure and Elasticity
  • The near-surface, cold parts of a planet (the
    lithosphere) behaves elastically
  • This lithosphere can support loads (e.g.
    volcanoes)
  • We can use observations of how the lithosphere
    deforms under these loads to assess how thick it
    is
  • The thickness of the lithosphere tells us about
    how rapidly temperature increases with depth i.e.
    it helps us to deduce the thermal structure of
    the planet
  • The deformation of the elastic lithosphere under
    loads is called flexure
  • See EART162 for more details!

29
Flexural Stresses
load
Crust
Elastic plate
Mantle
  • In general, a load will be supported by a
    combination of elastic stresses and buoyancy
    forces (due to the different density of crust and
    mantle)
  • The elastic stresses will be both compressional
    and extensional (see diagram)
  • Note that in this example the elastic portion
    includes both crust and mantle

30
Flexural Parameter (1)
load
rw
  • Consider a load acting on an elastic plate

Te
a
rm
  • The plate has a particular elastic thickness Te
  • If the load is narrow, then the width of
    deformation is controlled by the properties of
    the plate
  • The width of deformation a is called the flexural
    parameter and is given by

Here E is Youngs modulus, g is gravity and n is
Poissons ratio (0.3)
31
Flexural Parameter (2)
  • If the applied load is much wider than a, then
    the load cannot be supported elastically and must
    be supported by buoyancy (isostasy)
  • If the applied load is much narrower than a, then
    the width of deformation is given by a
  • If we can measure a flexural wavelength, that
    allows us to infer a and thus Te directly.
  • Inferring Te (elastic thickness) is useful
    because Te is controlled by a planets
    temperature structure

a
32
Example
10 km
  • This is an example of a profile across a rift on
    Ganymede
  • An eyeball estimate of a would be about 10 km
  • For ice, we take E10 GPa, Dr900 kg m-3 (there
    is no overlying ocean), g1.3 ms-2

Distance, km
  • If a10 km then Te1.5 km
  • A numerical solution gives Te1.4 km pretty
    good!
  • So we can determine Te remotely
  • This is useful because Te is ultimately
    controlled by the temperature structure of the
    subsurface

33
Te and temperature structure
  • Cold materials behave elastically
  • Warm materials flow in a viscous fashion
  • This means there is a characteristic temperature
    (roughly 70 of the melting temperature) which
    defines the base of the elastic layer
  • E.g. for ice the base of the elastic layer is at
    about 190 K
  • The measured elastic layer thickness is 1.4 km
    (from previous slide)
  • So the thermal gradient is 60 K/km
  • This tells us that the (conductive) ice shell
    thickness is 2.7 km (!)

110 K
270 K
190 K
1.4 km
Depth
elastic
viscous
Temperature
34
Te in the solar system
  • Remote sensing observations give us Te
  • Te depends on the composition of the material
    (e.g. ice, rock) and the temperature structure
  • If we can measure Te, we can determine the
    temperature structure (or heat flux)
  • Typical (approx.) values for solar system objects

35
Erosion and Deposition
  • Erosion and deposition require the presence of a
    fluid (gas or liquid) to pick up, transport and
    deposit surface material
  • Liquid transport more efficient
  • These processes tend to be rapid compared to
    other geological processes
  • So surface appearance is often controlled by
    these processes
  • Earth, Mars, Titan, Venus have erosional or
    sedimentary features

36
Aeolian Features (Mars)
  • Wind is an important process on Mars at the
    present day (e.g. Viking seismometers . . .)
  • Dust re-deposited over a very wide area (so the
    surface of Mars appears to have a very homogenous
    composition)
  • Occasionally get global dust-storms (hazardous
    for spacecraft)
  • Rates of deposition/erosion almost unknown

Martian dune features
Image of a dust devil caught in the act
30km
37
Aeolian features (elsewhere)
Namib desert, Earth few km spacing
Longitudinal dunes, Earth (top), Titan (bottom),
1 km spacing
Yardangs (elongated dunes) Mead crater, Venus
38
Wind directions
Venus
Wind streaks, Venus
Mars (crater diameter 90m)
Global patterns of wind direction can be compared
with general circulation models (GCMs)
39
Fluvial features
  • Valley networks on Mars
  • Only occur on ancient terrain (4 Gyr old)
  • What does this imply about ancient Martian
    atmosphere?

100 km
  • Valley network on Titan
  • Presumably formed by methane runoff
  • What does this imply about Titan climate and
    surface?

30 km
40
Martian Outflow channels
  • Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive
    (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on
    Earth
  • Morphology similar to giant post-glacial floods
    on Earth
  • Spread throughout Martian history, but
    concentrated in the first 1-2 Gyr of Martian
    history
  • Source of water unknown possibly ice melted by
    volcanic eruptions (jokulhaups)?

Baker (2001)
41
Martian Gullies
  • A very unexpected discovery (Malin Edgett,
    Science 283, 2330-2335, 2000)
  • Found predominantly at high latitudes (gt30o), on
    pole-facing slopes, and shallow (100m below
    surface)
  • Inferred to be young cover young features like
    dunes and polygons
  • How do we explain them? Liquid water is not
    stable at the surface!
  • Maybe even active at present day?

42
Lakes
Clearwater Lakes Canada 30km diameters
Gusev, Mars 150km
Titan, 30km across
Titan lakes are (presumably) methane/ethane Gusev
crater shows little evidence for water, based on
Mars Rover data
43
Erosion
  • Erosion will remove small, near-surface craters
  • But it may also expose (exhume) craters that were
    previously buried
  • Erosion has recently been recognized as a major
    process on Mars, but the details are still
    extremely poorly understood
  • The images below show examples of fluvial
    features which have been exhumed the channels
    are highstanding. Why?

channel
meander
Malin and Edgett, Science 2003
44
Sediments in outcrop
Opportunity (Meridiani)
Cross-bedding indicative of prolonged fluid flows
45
Summary
  • Volcanism happens because of higher temperatures,
    reduced pressure or lowered solidus
  • Conductive cooling time t d2/k
  • Planetary cooling leads to compression
  • Elastic materials s E e
  • Flexural parameter controls the lengthscale of
    deformation of the elastic lithosphere
  • Lithospheric thickness tells us about thermal
    gradient
  • Bodies with atmospheres/hydrospheres have
    sedimentation and erosion Earth, Mars, Venus,
    Titan

46
Key Concepts
  • Solidus liquidus
  • Conductive cooling timescale
  • Cryovolcanism
  • Stretching factor
  • Hookes law and Youngs modulus
  • Contraction and cooling
  • Byerlees law
  • Flexural parameter and elastic thickness
  • Valley networks, gullies and outflow channels

47
End of Lecture
48
(No Transcript)
49
Te and age
  • The elastic thickness recorded is the lowest
    since the episode of deformation
  • In general, elastic thicknesses get larger with
    time (why?)

McGovern et al., JGR 2002
  • So by looking at features of different ages, we
    can potentially measure how Te, and thus the
    temperature structure, have varied over time
  • This is important for understanding planetary
    evolution

50
Compression on icy satellites
  • Rarely observed. Why not?
  • Is it hidden somewhere?
  • Icy satellites are dominated by extension

The only example of unambiguously documented
compressional features on Europa to date
Prockter and Pappalardo, Science 2000
51
Tidally-driven strike-slip faults
  • How do they form? A consequence of the way tidal
    stresses rotate over one diurnal cycle (Tufts et
    al. 1999).

Vertical (map) view
Friction prevents block motion
Tidal stresses
  • This ratcheting effect can lead to large net
    displacements
  • Strike-slip motion will lead to shear heating if
    sufficiently rapid (c.f. San Andreas on Earth)
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