“…Such recurring mechanical alteration of the regolith has been proposed as a process maintaining mobile dust available for lifting (Piqueux et al, 2016), contributing to impact the global climate over long periods of time (Mischna & Piqueux, 2020). Similar conclusions can been drawn when translucent ice forms on (or within) the Martian regolith: at sunrise, the solar energy is deposited at the base of the transparent frost layer, at the interface with the regolith grains, and not at the very atmosphere/ground interface (see the abundant literature on the topic for the polar regions; Diniega et al, 2013Diniega et al, , 2021Hansen et al, 2010Hansen et al, , 2013Pilorget & Forget, 2015;Pilorget et al, 2011Pilorget et al, , 2013Piqueux et al, 2003Piqueux et al, , 2016Pommerol et al, 2011Pommerol et al, , 2013Portyankina et al, 2010Portyankina et al, , 2012Thomas et al, 2010). Basal sublimation yields winds internal to the very surficial regolith and has the potential to disturb the upper regolith.…”