“…Knowledge ofthe surface heat flow is very important for understanding the thermal and geologic evolution of a planetary body. There are not direct measurements for Mars, but heat flows have been deduced for diverse martian regions from the effective elastic thickness of the lithosphere (Solomon and Head, 1990;Anderson and Grimm, 1998;Zuber et al, 2000;Nimmo, 2002;Kiefer, 2004;McGovern et al, 2002McGovern et al, , 2004Grott et al, 2005;Ruiz et al, 2006Ruiz et al, , 2008Kronberg et al, 2007;Ruiz, 2009;Dohm et al, 2009a;Ritzer and Hauck, 2009 ) or from the depth to the brittle-ductile transition beneath large thrust faults (Schultz and Watters, 2001;Grott et al, 2007;Ruiz et al, 2008Ruiz et al, , 2009. So deduced heat flows are valid for the time when the lithosphere was loaded or faulted, permitting us to delinea te, in a tirst approximation, the thermal evolution Given the lack of large scale tectonic activity at the present time, the possibility of using effective elastic thicknesses for estimating the present-day thermal state of this planet seems restricted to the polar regions, where loading by ice caps is a recent phenomenon, estimated to be a few million years old (Laskar et al, 2002;Phillips et al, 2008 ).…”