P31A-2056
CRYOSEISM VIBRATIONAL MOVEMENT AND SORTING OF DETRITUS OF MARS’ REGOLITH BEDFORMS (E.G., ~ STREAKS, GULLIES): A NEW, DRY, MIDSUMMER ANTARCTIC ANALOGUE MECHANISM
Abstract:
This dry, mechanical, cryoseism mechanism is here proposed also for now waterless Mars and other icy Solar System bodies. Regolith features of Mars’ cryosphere may appear different from anrarctic analogues owing to likely operation over tens if not hundreds of millions of years longer than on Earth. The strain distributions in tensile failure of ice better explain a common spacing uniformity of many martian linear features than others’ proposed origins, and for some “active” streaks and gully channels, TARS, RSL and dune-slipface channels, as well as for dune orthogonality, diurnal moonquakes and asteroid-regolith detrital sorting (e.g., “rubble-pile” 25143-Itokawa). Because periodic shade from topography (canyons, craters, etc.) is needed, the mechanism is not expected on flattish terrains where more normal annual cooling rates produce the common polygonal tensile fracturing of ice