No abstract
To explain the much higher denudation rates and valley network development on early Mars (>∼3.6 Gyr ago), most investigators have invoked either steady state warm/wet (Earthlike) or cold/dry (modern Mars) end‐member paleoclimates. Here we discuss evidence that highland gradation was prolonged, but generally slow and possibly ephemeral during the Noachian Period, and that the immature valley networks entrenched during a brief terminal epoch of more erosive fluvial activity in the late Noachian to early Hesperian. Observational support for this interpretation includes (1) late‐stage breaching of some enclosed basins that had previously been extensively modified, but only by internal erosion and deposition; (2) deposition of pristine deltas and fans during a late stage of contributing valley entrenchment; (3) a brief, erosive response to base level decline (which was imparted as fretted terrain developed by a suite of processes unrelated to surface runoff) in fluvial valleys that crosscut the highland‐lowland boundary scarp; and (4) width/contributing area relationships of interior channels within valley networks, which record significant late‐stage runoff production with no evidence of recovery to lower‐flow conditions. This erosion appears to have ended abruptly, as depositional landforms generally were not entrenched with declining base level in crater lakes. A possible planetwide synchronicity and common cause to the late‐stage fluvial activity are possible but remain uncertain. This increased activity of valley networks is offered as a possible explanation for diverse features of highland drainage basins, which were previously cited to support competing warm, wet and cold, dry paleoclimate scenarios.
[1] We present evidence that a final epoch of widespread fluvial erosion and deposition in the cratered highlands during the latest Noachian or early to mid-Hesperian was characterized by integration of flow within drainage networks as long as 4000 km and trunk valley incision of 50 to 350 m into earlier Noachian depositional basins. Locally deltaic sediments were deposited where incised valley systems debouched into basins. Large alluvial fans of sediment deposited from erosion of alcoves in steep crater walls probably formed contemporaneously. The depth of incision below Noachian surfaces correlates strongly with the gradient and the total valley length, suggesting consistent regional hydrology. Estimated discharges from channel dimensions indicate flow rates equivalent to mean annual floods in terrestrial drainage basins of equivalent size. Such high flow rates imply either runoff directly from precipitation or rapid melting of accumulated snow. Development of duricrusts on the Noachian landscape may have contributed to focusing of late-stage erosion within major trunk drainages. This latestage epoch of intense fluvial activity appears to be fundamentally different than the fluvial environment prevailing during most of the Noachian Period, which was characterized by widespread fluvial erosion of highlands and crater rims, deeply infilling crater floors, and intercrater basins through ephemeral fluvial activity, and development of local rather than regionally integrated drainage networks.
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