Fluvial reworking eliminates small craters, but does not meaningfully bias the Mars interbedded-crater record Institutional Repository Document uri icon

abstract

  • Interpreting structures, morphology, and chemistry of the exposed stratigraphic record on Mars is complicated by ancient surface processes that variably removed parts of the record. Previous research has used the lack of smaller craters (<50 m diameter) interbedded with fluvial deposits to constrain atmospheric pressure when rivers were active on Mars; the notion being that higher atmospheric pressure would have prevented smaller craters from forming. We hypothesize that contemporaneous channel lateral migration and avulsion could have reworked sedimentary deposits and eliminated craters from the stratigraphic record, thereby undermining atmospheric paleo-pressure interpretations. To test this hypothesis, we simulated coeval river-delta development and crater production, and quantified crater preservation in resulting stratigraphy. We document widespread crater degradation (~67% of craters <50 m are at least partially eroded), and observe a marked increase in preservation with increasing crater diameter. That is to say, fluvial reworking preferentially removes smaller craters from the stratigraphic record. However, synthetic crater diameter distributions incorporating fluvial reworking effects do not reproduce observations on Mars, because so many smaller craters are produced and preserved. We find that, although river channels are sometimes in the right place to eliminate crater deposits from the stratigraphic record, production of smaller craters outpaces fluvial reworking under all modeled circumstances, and that a higher pressure ancient atmosphere is necessary to reproduce observations (i.e., consistent with existing interpretations of interbedded crater records). Our findings therefore bolster studies that assert fluvial reworking is not a primary control on smaller interbedded crater counts on Mars.

author list (cited authors)

  • Moodie, A., & Goudge, T.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • Moodie, Andrew||Goudge, Timothy

Book Title

  • EarthArXiv

publication date

  • November 2023