2015
DOI: 10.1002/2015je004915
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Recent (Late Amazonian) enhanced backweathering rates on Mars: Paracratering evidence from gully alcoves

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Cited by 41 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…The duration of the snow‐free period influences rock stability. This can have significant impacts on rock fatigue (Jia et al , ) and affects the thermal controls of effective rock wall retreat rates (Siewert et al , ; Krautblatter and Moore, ; de Haas et al , ). Warming rock expands uniformly and fractures narrow (Cooper and Simmons, ), whereas cooling rock contracts and fractures open.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The duration of the snow‐free period influences rock stability. This can have significant impacts on rock fatigue (Jia et al , ) and affects the thermal controls of effective rock wall retreat rates (Siewert et al , ; Krautblatter and Moore, ; de Haas et al , ). Warming rock expands uniformly and fractures narrow (Cooper and Simmons, ), whereas cooling rock contracts and fractures open.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also consider it possible that the mechanism of CO 2 sublimation-triggered failures we observed in the laboratory could also have occurred under climate conditions different from those observed on Mars today, which may explain some of the sediment transport that has contributed to gully formation on timescales of millions of years (Reiss et al 2004;Schon et al 2009;de Haas et al 2015a). However, further modelling work to understand the plausible temporal and spatial extent of this process at the present day would be needed in order to confidently extrapolate this process into the past, an endeavour beyond the scope of this present work.…”
Section: Application To Marsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It should be acknowledged that whether this is a primary feature of the gully-forming process is under debate (cf. de Haas et al 2015a;Dickson et al 2015). The relationship between this weathering and the action of CO 2 condensation-sublimation cycles is an area for future work.…”
Section: Application To Marsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, moisture is widely cited as a substantial contributor to rock breakdown. Strong empirical relationships have been extensively documented between moisture and associated weathering, regolith production (defined here as the conversion of bedrock into mobile sediment), and/or erosion [e.g., Burnett et al, 2008;Griggs, 1936;Haas et al, 2015;Hall, 1986;Larsen et al, 2014;Matsukura and Takahashi, 2000;Owen et al, 2011;Sass, 2005]. Overall, however, the mechanisms by which water-in either liquid or vapor form-influence mechanical weathering have remained unclear [Burke et al, 2007;Hall and Hall, 1996;Halsey et al, 1998;Mol and Viles, 2012;Sass, 2005].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%