Volume 39, Issue 22
Planets
Free Access

Infiltration of Martian outflow channel floodwaters into lowland cavernous systems

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez

Corresponding Author

Planetary Science Institute, Tucson, Arizona, USA

Corresponding author: J. Alexis P. Rodriguez, Planetary Science Institute, 1700 E. Fort Lowell Rd., Ste. 106, Tucson, AZ 85719‐2395, USA. (alexis@psi.edu)Search for more papers by this author
Mary Bourke

Planetary Science Institute, Tucson, Arizona, USA

Department of Geography, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland

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Kenneth L. Tanaka

Astrogeology Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Flagstaff, Arizona, USA

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Hideaki Miyamoto

University Museum, University of Tokyo, Japan

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Jeffrey Kargel

Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA

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Victor Baker

Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA

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Alberto G. Fairén

Space Science and Astrobiology Division, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California, USA

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Richard J. Davies

Centre for Research into Earth Energy Systems, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Durham, Durham, UK

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Lynne Bridget

Institute of Earth Science and Engineering, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

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Rogelio Linares Santiago

Unitat de Geodinàmica Externa i d'Hidrogeologia, Departament de Geologia, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

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Mario Zarroca Hernández

Unitat de Geodinàmica Externa i d'Hidrogeologia, Departament de Geologia, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

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Daniel C. Berman

Planetary Science Institute, Tucson, Arizona, USA

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First published: 30 November 2012
Citations: 14

This article was corrected on 20 MAY 2014. See the end of the full text for details.

Abstract

[1] The hydrosphere of Mars has remained mostly concealed within the subsurface for the past ∼3.5 Gyr. Localized rupturing of the permafrost‐capped crust led to voluminous groundwater discharges that carved some of the largest known channels in the solar system. However, our knowledge of the nature of the flows and their ultimate fate remains incomplete, partly because diagnostic landforms at outflow channel termini have been largely destroyed or buried. The Hebrus Valles outflow channels were excavated by fluid discharges that emanated from two point sources, and they mostly terminate in systems of fractures and depressions within the northern plains. Our investigation indicates that outflow channel floodwaters were captured and reabsorbed into the subsurface in zones where caverns developed within the northern plains. These findings imply that the study region comprises the only known location in the Martian northern lowlands where the fate of outflow channel discharges can be assessed with confidence. We propose that evacuation of subsurface materials via mud volcanism was an important process in cavern formation. Our conceptual model provides a hypothesis to account for the fate of sediments and fluids from some of the Martian outflow channels. It also reveals a mechanism for lowland cavern formation and upper crustal volatile enrichment after the development of the Martian global cryosphere.

1. Introduction

[2] The Martian outflow channels were excavated by the largest estimated flood volumes in our solar system [Carr, 1979; Clifford and Parker, 2001; Tanaka et al., 2005]. These waters were released from aquifers [Carr, 1979; Clifford and Parker, 2001] and/or surface lakes [Irwin et al., 2004] and may have resulted in the formation of transient oceans [Parker et al., 1993; Fairén, 2003], lakes [Fairén, 2003], continental‐scale ice sheets [Kargel et al., 1995], and regionally extensive debris flow deposits [Tanaka et al., 2001]. The study region (Figure 1a and 1b), centered at 19°N., 125°E., includes the Hebrus Valles (HV) and Hephaestus Fossae (HF). It occurs along the SE margin of the 2000‐km diameter Utopia impact basin on the lower flank of the Elysium volcanic rise, and it is also positioned along the global topographic dichotomy separating ancient southern cratered highland terrains and the Vastitas Borealis Formation (VBF), which consists of relatively younger sedimentary deposits forming the floors of the northern lowland basins [Tanaka et al., 2005].

image
View of the Hebrus Valles and the Hephaestus Fossae regions. (a) MOLA DEM (128 pixels per degree) on Viking MDIM 2.1 mosaic (256 pixels per degree). (b) Geologic feature map. Mapping of the troughs, pits, impact craters, and channel floors was performed using a CTX mosaic on a background THEMIS VIS mosaic. The margins of the fractured mounds and the contact between the boundary plains and the Vastitas Borealis Formation (VBF) were traced on a THEMIS infrared (IR) mosaic at 230 m/pixel. (c) Close‐up view on our mapping of the Hebrus Valles terminal zones.

2. Data Sources and Methods

[3] This geologic investigation has been performed using Environmental Systems Research Institute's (ESRI) ArcGIS software. Geologic feature mapping (Figure 1b and 1c) and characterization (Figure 2a–2h) were carried out using Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) Context Camera (CTX, 5.15 to 5.91 m/pixel), and Mars Odyssey Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) visible wavelength multiband (VIS, 17 to 40 m/pixel/day IR, 100 m/pixel) images. Topographic information and volumetric estimations have been derived utilizing Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) digital elevation models (DEMs) at ∼460 m/pixel horizontal and 1 m vertical resolutions.

image
Close‐up views of study region; context and locations shown in Figure 1. All scale bars correspond to 5 km. (a) Site 1. THEMIS VIS images V11629004 and V12852005 centered at 126°47′ E., 20°35′ N. (b) Zone of knickpoint (black arrow) retreat shown in panel a. CTX image P13_006196_1998 centered at 126°43′ E., 20°33′ N. (c) Elevation profiles located in panel b. (d) Site 2. Composite of THEMIS VIS images V02617006, V12877003 and V01868003 centered at 125 °36′ E., 21°34′ N. (e) Zone of knickpoint retreat (black arrow) shown in panel d. CTX image P17_007765_2015 centered at 125°40′ E., 21°44′ N. (f) Part of Hephaestus Fossae. CTX image B18_016560_2033 centered at 122°70′ E., 22°00′ N. (g) Zone north of site 2 where systems of linear depressions interconnect clusters of features interpreted as mud volcanoes. Part of CTX image B18_016705_2048 centered at 125°18′ E., 25°00′ N. (h) Zone where Hebrus Valles dissects a plain modified by mud volcanism. Part of CTX image P02_001805_1996 centered at 126°47′E., 19°28′ N.

3. Results

[4] Cone features interpreted to be mud volcanoes form extensive fields within the northern plains of Mars [Oehler and Allen, 2010, 2012], which include the southern Utopia boundary plains, where the study region is located [Skinner and Tanaka, 2007] (auxiliary material, Text S1). At some locations within the study region, features interpreted as mud volcanoes cluster into linear ridges (black arrow in Figure 2f). These ridge patterns align with networks of individual pits, pit chains and troughs, all of which show variable degrees of integration (Figure 1c, white arrow in Figure 2f). At other locations, poorly integrated networks of linear depressions extend and interconnect these features (white arrows in Figure 2g). We suggest that within the study region, collapsed sections of cavern systems are expressed at the surface by these linear depressions. The apparent system connectivity of mud volcanoes and the pit and trough networks suggests a genetic link between mud volcanism and the development of cavern networks.

[5] The distal reaches of HV form two distributaries, each of which terminates within isolated pit and trough networks (sites 1 and 2 in Figure 1c), suggesting drainage of floodwaters into the subsurface [Christiansen and Hopler, 1987; Carr and Malin, 2000; Tanaka et al., 2005]. The subsurface pathway of distal floodwaters is here demonstrated by the identification of local channel incision by knickpoint retreat (Figure 2a–2e), coupled with a decrease in channel capacity downstream from some pits (white arrows in Figure 2a and 2d), and the particularly abrupt transition that the fluvial morphology exhibits at site 1 into the branching, rectilinear pit and trough networks (white dashes in Figure 2a).

[6] The absence of evidence of ponding upstream of pits and troughs (e.g., Figure 2b and 2e) and presence of channel pendant bars that extend into troughs (e.g., black arrow in Figure 2e) are indicative of rapid and unobstructed flow [Baker, 1982, 2009] into the subsurface. Stream disappearance into sinkholes is common on Earth [Lorenz, 2006] and conduits fed by surface streams through sinkholes can transmit large quantities of bed load and suspended load [White, 1988].

image
(a) MOLA shaded‐relief view of the northern plains of Mars showing the highland/lowland boundary margin (orange hachured line; dotted or queried where dissected or obscured). The Vastitas Borealis and Isidis Planitia units are green and the Utopia lahars are pink, based on geologic mapping of the northern plains [Tanaka et al., 2005]. Point symbols designate the locations of landforms mainly identified in THEMIS VIS images and MOLA altimetry data that possibly resulted from ground‐volatile activity, in the following interpretive types: Mass flows (red circles), mud volcanoes (yellow triangles), and various troughs and depressions formed by collapse and/or subsidence (white squares). Abbreviated geographic names include Arcadia Planitia (Ar), Utopia Planitia (UP), Isidis Planitia (IP), Deuteronilus Mensae (DM), Cydonia Mensae (CM), Acidalia Mensa (AcM), Acidalia Planitia (AcP), Chryse Planitia (CP), Tempe Terra (TT), Alba Mons (AM), Acheron Fossae (AF), Scandia region (Sc), and Planum Boreum (PB). (b) Schematic diagrams showing upper crustal cross‐sectional views depicting the hydrogeologic conditions that led to the inferred history of resurfacing. Panels 1–4 and 5–8 show alternative regional geologic scenarios, respectively involving a three‐zone (ice‐rich cryosphere [Cr], hydrosphere [Hr] and basement [Bs]) and a two‐zone (ice‐rich cryosphere and basement) upper crustal structure. The cross‐sections extend from Elysium rise to the floor of the Utopia basin. EC stands for Elysium Chasma, HV for Hebrus Valles, and VBF for Vastitas Borealis Formation. Surface topography slightly modified from MOLA for a better artistic reconstruction. 1. Pressurization of a continuous groundwater zone produces fractures within the overlying cryosphere, which led to mud volcanism along the southern margin of the Utopia basin. 2. The hydrosphere progressively drains (white dotted arrow) and the conduit feeder systems drain. 3. An igneous intrusion into the cryosphere produces large volumes of melt that are then released at the surface to carve HV. 4. The floods are captured by the evacuated caverns. 5. Dikes intrude an ice‐rich cryosphere, which does not confine an underlying groundwater zone. The dikes produce hydrothermal systems, some of which extend to the surface and expel fluids to produce mud volcanism. 6. As the hydrothermal systems cool and water evaporates, the water table drops and evacuates the conduits. Groundwater within some isolated conduits that do not open to the surface freezes (white arrow). 7. A large intrusive magmatic body melts the cryosphere and produces catastrophic discharges that carve HV. 8. The groundwater discharges infiltrate into the evacuated conduits. (c) Schematic diagrams showing stages in proposed scenario for cavern development associated with Hebrus Valles and Hephaestus Fossae. 1. Hydrofractures within the regional cryosphere are produced by overpressure within an underlying hydrosphere. 2. Feeder conduits form along fractures and converge at the eruption sites. 3. Caverns develop underneath the eruption sites and where feeder conduits form dense networks. 4. Fluid drains from the caverns.

[7] An end‐member case scenario would indicate that the HV floods and transported sediments were mostly captured into the subsurface. The estimated cumulative volume of the Hebrus outflow channels (206 km3) exceeds that of the trough networks in their terminal regions by two orders of magnitude (site 1, 6.5 km3; site 2, 8.8 km3). However, we note that these trough networks likely represent only the portions of the cavern networks that underwent collapse. In addition, the neighboring HF pit and trough network has a cumulative volume of 637.8 km3, suggesting that caverns extensive enough to accommodate the estimated discharge volumes could have developed regionally. On the other hand, although our mapping shows that only a few small channels do not terminate in the trough networks (Figure 1c), which indicates that a fraction of the floods must have escaped infiltration at these sites, we do not rule out that extensive fluvial sedimentation occurred but the deposits are no longer recognizable because they were weathered and removed.

4. Discussion

4.1. Cavern Formation Associated With Northern Plains Mud Volcanism

[8] Carr and Malin [2000] suggested that the HF system may indicate a subsurface karst landscape formed by the dissolution of buried carbonate deposits. However, the only carbonate deposits that have so far been identified within the northern plains were exhumed from depths of ∼6 km during an impact crater forming event [e.g., Michalski and Niles, 2010]. At site 1 a channel extends to the floor of a ∼300 m deep trough from a zone of knickpoint retreat occurring at depths of just 10s of meters of outflow channel dissection (respectively, elevation profiles A‐A′ and B‐B′ inFigure 2c). These observations are indicative of caverns having existed at shallow depths within the study region. In the absence of the identification of shallowly buried carbonate deposits, we offer an alternative mechanism for the formation of the pseudo‐karst landscape. Our model invokes the role of mud volcanism in the formation of subsurface caverns.

[9] High hydraulic pressures are thought to have led to mud volcanism along the SE margins of the Utopia basin [Tanaka et al., 2003; Skinner and Tanaka, 2007], as well as within other regions of the northern plains [Oehler and Allen, 2010, 2012]. The high occurrence of mud volcanoes along boundary plains (Figure 3a) is consistent with the hydraulic head being driven by the relief aquifers extending across the highland‐lowland boundary [Rodríguez et al., 2010].

[10] Possible sites of Late Hesperian/Early Amazonian groundwater discharge, perhaps emanating from a groundwater zone that extended into more elevated terrains in the southern cratered highlands [Clifford and Parker, 2001], have been identified on the flanks of the Elysium rise [Tanaka et al., 2005; Skinner and Tanaka, 2007]. These sites are located at elevations ranging between approximately 3500 and 5000 m above the study region. Thus, provided that a regional groundwater zone existed at the time (1 in Figure 3b), this relief may have provided a hydraulic head (h (relief in meters) x g (for Mars 3.711 m/s2) × ρ (water density, ∼1 g/cm3)) between ∼13–18.5 MPa, values which are comparable to those postulated to have produced superlithostatic pressures and driven large‐scale hydrologic resurfacing in southern circum‐Chryse [Andrews‐Hanna and Phillips, 2007]. An alternative geologic scenario is that instead of a regional groundwater zone leading to superlithostatic pressures, pressurized groundwater systems resulted from intrusive magmatism into the cryosphere, including dikes (5 in Figure 3b), which during Early Amazonian Elysium volcanism [Tanaka et al., 2005] extended ∼350 km [Rice et al., 2002; Scott et al., 2002; Russell and Head, 2003] from the Elysium rise to the southeast. Craft and Lowell [2012] show that pressurized aquifers could have resulted from the melting and vaporization of regional permafrost deposits by intrusive dikes. They propose that these aquifers could have produced some catastrophic outflow channel discharges.

[11] Our model proposes that excess pressure within an aquifer(s) produced hydrofractures that penetrate an overlying cryosphere (1 in Figure 3c). Fluid circulation along the fractures led to the development of feeder conduits through which fluid‐sediment mixtures erupted to construct mud volcanoes. This mechanism is supported by observations on Earth [Brown, 1990; Davies and Stewart, 2005; Stewart and Davies, 2006] (2 in Figure 3c). In their models, subsurface flow through extensive and complex networks of feeder conduits converging underneath eruption sites [Morley, 2003; Davies and Stewart, 2005] may have resulted in thermo‐karstic and pseudo‐karstic (by suffusion) erosion along feeder conduits, which led to cavern development and enlargement [Deville et al., 2003; Davies et al., 2007; Davies, 2008] (3 in Figure 3c).

[12] We note, however, that other than the mud volcanic cones, no large volumes of surficial deposits have been identified, which could be indicative of the volume of evacuated subsurface geologic materials significantly exceeding the volumes of the overlying mud volcanoes, perhaps by as much as a few orders of magnitude [Valentine et al., 2010]. For example, it is possible that the VBF consisted of primarily ice‐rich permafrost, and thus relatively low volumes of lithics were ejected during mud volcanism [Mouginot et al., 2012]. Alternatively, a significant portion of the deposits could have been subject to weathering and reworking by small impact craters (Text S1), and aeolian mobilization during the 3.5 Gyr [Werner et al., 2011] since emplacement and are currently degraded beyond possible recognition in the used datasets.

[13] Fluid evacuation from the caverns could have resulted from (1) lowering of the regional water table as aquifers drained and/or hydrothermal systems cooled down (2 and 6 in Figure 3b), (2) eruptive phases of water expelling mud followed by evaporation, (3) eruptive phases of gases expelling mud, or (4) a combination of these processes. We note that alternating eruptive phases of mud, water and gases separated by periods of inactivity are known to occur in terrestrial mud volcanism [Deville et al., 2010]. In addition, unerupted water‐saturated sediment infilling portions of the feeder conduits' network would have eventually desiccated [e.g.,Grimm and Painter, 2009], thereby producing further subsurface void space.

4.2. Geologic Conditions Promoting Structural Stability of Evacuated Caverns

[14] Mud volcanism originating from under‐compacted mud‐rich strata within terrestrial clastic basin settings is known to lead to the formation of transient cavern systems, which upon structural failure lead to zones of surface collapse and subsidence [e.g.,Brown, 1990; Davies and Stewart, 2005; Davies et al., 2007; Stewart and Davies, 2006; Roberts et al., 2011]. In contrast, the inferred magnitude of floodwater infiltration within the study region (4 and 8 in Figure 3b) points to the existence of structurally stable caverns that were largely evacuated of fluids and sediments prior to HV outflow channel activity (2, 3, and 6, 7 in Figure 3b; 4 in Figure 3c).

[15] During the Early Amazonian, the Martian northern plains are thought to have consisted of extensive permafrost deposits [e.g., Clifford and Parker, 2001; Mouginot et al., 2012]. Mud volcanism occurring within permafrost is indicated by mud flows that extend from the eruptive cones into polygonal fractures [Oehler and Allen, 2010]. At −60°C, a predicted typical mean annual surface temperature for the investigated latitudes [Mellon et al., 2004], permafrost could have had a mechanical strength close to that of limestone [Kuribayashi et al., 1985; Ladyani, 2003], which could have allowed for the formation of structurally stable evacuated caverns. On Earth, caverns are known to occur in ice‐welded sediments such as in association with networks of ice wedges in permafrost [Costard et al., 2012] and ice‐welded moraine deposits [Moorman, 2005]. Some glacier caverns are known to have remained stable over decades [Halliday, 2007].

[16] The gravity of Mars is 0.38 times that of Earth, which would have allowed for the development of 2.5 times deeper cavern systems, particularly within the Martian northern plains, which appear to consist of low density (∼1 g/cm3) deposits [Mouginot et al., 2012]. Conduit compartmentalization into nested systems of smaller pipes [Davies and Stewart, 2005] could have also promoted the caverns' mechanical stability, particularly if these were chemically cemented (Text S2). In terms of cavern closure, terrestrial caverns occur to a maximum depth of ∼2 km [Klimchouk et al., 2008], thus gravity differences alone could allow Martian caverns to resist closure to ∼5 km depth, particularly if deep‐seated carbonates form extensive deposits within the northern lowland's upper crust [Michalski and Niles, 2010]. We note, however, that large subglacial lakes existing at depths of ∼4 km under the Antarctic Ice Sheet [Eyles, 2006], indicate that, on Earth, fluid‐filled glacial caverns can exist at depths significantly greater than 2 km. In addition, the maximum stable width of a cavern increases with the inverse square root of gravitational acceleration [Haruyama, 2009]. Consequently, on Mars caverns within geologic materials that have similar mechanical strength could have ∼60% wider roofs than on Earth. If maximum cavern dimensions all scale similarly, Martian caverns could be more voluminous than Earth's, perhaps four times (1.63) greater.

4.3. Geologic Conditions Leading to Outflow Channel Discharges Following the Cessation of Mud Volcanism

[17] The absence of mud volcanoes along the floor of HV (Figure 2h) indicates that regional mud volcanism ceased prior to outflow channel activity. Mud volcanism could have ceased as aquifers depleted (2 in Figure 3b), and/or hydrothermal systems cooled (6 in Figure 3b), which would have led to a reduction of hydraulic pressure within the regional aquifer(s) and a lowering of the water table. The formation of HV during the Early Amazonian [Tanaka et al., 2005] is indicative of a second stage of aquifer development and pressurization, which could have been produced by the localized subsurface melting of an ice‐rich cryosphere during intrusive magmatism [Rice et al., 2002] (3 and 7 in Figure 3b). The absence of evidence indicative of a second stage of mud volcanism following outflow channel formation suggests that aquifer development did not result in regional groundwater dispersion, but instead the aquifers were drained during catastrophic discharge.

Acknowledgments

[18] The Editor thanks the two anonymous reviewers for their assistance in evaluating this paper.

    Erratum

  1. This is the final version of the article which was intended for publication on 30 November 2012. Most of the corrections consisted of modified figure callouts and higher resolution Figures 1 and 2. Additionally, the HF pit volume measurement in paragraph 7 was changed from 856.2 to 637.8 km3.