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New Global Surveyor Data Reveals Deeply Layered Terrain, Magnetic Features and Genesis of a Martian Dust Storm



Douglas Isbell
Headquarters, Washington, DC                    March 13, 1998
(Phone: 202/358-1547)

Diane Ainsworth
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA
(Phone: 818/354-5011)

Cynthia M. O'Carroll
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD
(Phone: 301/286-6943)


RELEASE: 98-45

NEW GLOBAL SURVEYOR DATA REVEALS DEEPLY LAYERED TERRAIN, 
MAGNETIC FEATURES AND GENESIS OF A MARTIAN DUST STORM

    For the first time in Mars exploration, a spacecraft has 
captured the full evolution of a Martian dust storm.  NASA's 
Mars Global Surveyor mission also has returned new insights 
into the deeply layered terrain and mineral composition of the 
Martian surface, and to highly magnetized crustal features that 
provide important clues about the planet's interior. 

    These findings are among the early results from the Mars-
orbiting mission being reported in today's issue of Science 
magazine.

    This first set of formal results comes from data obtained 
in October and November 1997, while the spacecraft was just 
beginning to use the drag of Mars' upper atmosphere to lower 
and circularize its highly elliptical orbit in a process called 
aerobraking.  At the time, a dust storm was brewing on Mars and 
had grown to about the size of the South Atlantic Ocean. 

    The Global Surveyor data suggest that the event began as a 
set of small dust storms along the edge of the planet's 
southern polar cap, according to Dr. Arden Albee of the 
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, the Mars 
Global Surveyor mission scientist.  By Thanksgiving, it had 
expanded into a large regional dust storm in Noachis Terra that 
covered almost 180 degrees longitude, while spanning 20 degrees 
south latitude to nearly the tip of the Martian equator. 

    "As this storm obscured the Martian landscape, we followed 
it in detail using several instruments onboard Mars Global 
Surveyor," Albee said.  "The Thermal Emission Spectrometer 
mapped the temperature and opacity of the atmosphere while the 
camera followed the visual effects.  The effects of the storm 
extended to great heights of about 80 miles (130 kilometers) 
and resulted in great increases in both atmospheric density and 
variability from orbit to orbit. These atmospheric measurements 
have great significance to future Mars missions that will be 
using aerobraking techniques too." 

    Before the storm, atmospheric dust was generally 
distributed very uniformly, Albee said.  Observations of the 
limb of the planet in the northern hemisphere revealed both 
low-lying dust hazes and detached water-ice clouds at altitudes 
of up to 34 miles (55 kilometers).  Movement of these clouds was
tracked by the spectrometer as the planet rotated. Atmospheric turbulence 
disrupted these cloud patterns as the small storms began to 
rise and kick more dust into the air.  As the storm began to 
abate, small local storms began to crop up again along the 
edges of the south polar cap, and ice clouds formed in 
depressions as the carbon dioxide cap continued to retreat. 

    In addition to these unprecedented observations of a full-
blown Martian dust storm, measurements from the spacecraft's 
Magnetometer and Electron Reflectometer have yielded new 
findings about Mars' strong, localized magnetic fields.  These 
patches of the crust, which register high levels of magnetism, 
are beginning to unlock some of the mysteries surrounding Mars' 
internal dynamo and when it died, said Dr. Mario Acuna of 
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD. 

    "These locally magnetized areas on Mars could not form 
without the presence of an overall global magnetic field that 
was perhaps as strong as Earth's is today," says Acuna. "Since 
the internal dynamo that powered the global field is extinct, 
these local magnetic fields act as fossils, preserving a record 
of the geologic history and thermal evolution of Mars." 

    Magnetic fields are created by the movement of electrically 
conducting fluids, and a planet can generate a global magnetic 
field if its interior consists of molten metal hot enough to 
undergo convective motion, similar to the churning motion seen 
in boiling water.

    "The small size and highly magnetic nature of these crustal 
features, which measure on the order of 30 miles (50 
kilometers), are found within the ancient cratered terrain 
rather than within the younger volcanic terrain," Acuna said.  
"By correlating crustal age with magnetization, we have a 
perfect window on Mars' past, which will help us to determine 
when Mars' internal dynamo ceased operating."

    High-resolution images of dunes, sandsheets and drifts also 
are helping reveal earlier chapters of Martian history. 
Landforms shaped by erosion are almost everywhere, according to 
Albee, and many bear a striking resemblance to 
Colorado's Rocky Mountains.  Rocky ridges poke through the 
Martian dust just as the jagged edges of cliffs pierce through 
a blanket of snow in the Rockies.  Martian dust appears to have 
spilled down the sides of ridges just as fresh snow slides down 
a ski slope.

    "One almost expects to see ski tracks crisscrossing the 
area," Albee added.  "These images present a sharp contrast to 
the images of boulder-strewn deserts found at the Viking and 
Pathfinder landing sites." 

    Newly released images from the Mars Global Surveyor camera, 
developed by principal investigator Dr. Michael Malin of Malin 
Space Science Systems, Inc., San Diego, can be viewed on the 
Internet at: 

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/marsnews  or  www.msss.com/

    The Martian crust also exhibits much more layering at great 
depth than was expected. The steep walls of canyons, valleys 
and craters show the Martian crust to be stratified at scales 
of a few tens of yards, which is an exciting discovery, Albee 
noted.  "At this point we simply do not know whether these 
layers represent piles of volcanic flows or sedimentary rocks 
that might have formed in a standing body of water," he said.

    The Thermal Emission Spectrometer, led by principal 
investigator Dr. Philip Christensen of Arizona State 
University, is beginning to obtain a few infrared emission 
spectra of the surface, although it is still too cold on the 
surface for the best results.  The best spectra clearly 
indicate the presence of pyroxene and plagioclase, minerals 
which are common in volcanic rocks, with a variable amount of 
dust component. No evidence was found for carbonate minerals, 
clay minerals or quartz.  If present in these rocks, their 
abundance must be less than about ten percent. 

    Their absence indicates that carbonates are not widespread 
over the surface of the planet, but they may still be found in 
specific locations that either favored their initial deposition 
or their subsequent preservation.  This finding could have 
important implications for identifying areas that may preserve 
signs of ancient life on Mars, since carbonate minerals are 
commonly formed in biological processes, Albee said. 

    Striking results also have been obtained from Global 
Surveyor's laser altimeter over Mars' northern hemisphere, 
which is exceptionally flat with slopes and surface roughness 
increasing toward the equator, according to principal 
investigator Dr. David Smith of Goddard.  The initial data for 
this region helps scientists interpret a variety of landforms, 
including the northern polar cap, gigantic canyons, ridges, 
craters of all sizes and shield volcanoes.  Most surprising are 
views of extraordinarily mundane regions -- as flat as the 
Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah - that extend over vast northern 
regions of the planet.

    Mars Global Surveyor will complete the first phase of its 
two-part aerobraking strategy at the end of March, at which 
time the science instruments will be turned on again for most 
of the next six months. Over this period, the spacecraft will 
stay in an 11 1/2-hour orbit and collect an additional bounty 
of data at a closest approach of about 106 miles (170 
kilometers) above the surface, much closer than the spacecraft 
will pass over the planet once it has reached its formal 
mapping orbit in March 1999.  This closer orbit will allow the 
science teams to take more detailed measurements of the Martian 
atmosphere and surface without magnetic interference from the 
solar wind.

    "When we decided to slow the pace of aerobraking to reduce 
the force on the solar panel that was damaged after launch, we 
knew we would get a bonus -- the ability to collect much more 
science data closer to the planet than will be possible during 
the prime mapping mission," said Glenn E. Cunningham, Mars 
Global Surveyor project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory, Pasadena, CA.  "Additionally, the six-month period 
between the end of March and early September will yield an 
extraordinary opportunity as the lowest point of the orbit 
migrates over the northern polar cap.  All of this information 
that is coming back now is really icing on the cake, a 
spectacular precursor to the global mapping data expected to 
start flowing next year."

    Mars Global Surveyor is part of a sustained program of Mars 
explorationknown as the Mars Surveyor Program.  The mission is 
managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for NASA's Office of 
Space Science, Washington,  DC.  JPL's industrial partner is 
Lockheed Martin Astronautics, Denver, CO, which developed and 
operates the spacecraft. JPL is a division of the California 
Institute of Technology.

                             -end-