1 / 18

Geology of Mercury

Geology of Mercury. By Triana Henz. Stratigraphy. Terrian reconnaissance Images of the planet Classification of images Find cause and affect Chronostratigraphic classification Finding major events. First Map of Mercury.

matty
Download Presentation

Geology of Mercury

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Geology of Mercury By Triana Henz

  2. Stratigraphy • Terrian reconnaissance • Images of the planet • Classification of images • Find cause and affect • Chronostratigraphic classification • Finding major events

  3. First Map of Mercury • Trask and Guest were the first to map Mercury once the Mariner 10 images were analyze • There were six things that had caught their eyes the first time they were looking at the images • Other people after them help develop the stratigraphic that is used today for Mercury

  4. Wide-spread inter-crater plains

  5. Heavily cratered plains

  6. Caloris basin and related deposits

  7. Smooth Plains

  8. Hilly and Lineated antipodal to Caloris Basin

  9. Younger craters

  10. Pre-Tolstoj • The oldest identified terrian • Occurred before 4 Gigaannum (Ga) • Multiringed basin deposits • Extensive intercrater plains • High impact rate • Crustial formation and early evolution

  11. Tolstojan System • Tolstoj basin • ~4 - 3.5 Ga • Goya Formation • “Archimedean” craters

  12. Calorian System • Caloris Impact and basin • Wide-spread smooth plains • 3.9 – 3(.5) Ga • Caloris Group

  13. Caloris Montes and Nervo

  14. Odin

  15. Van Eyck Formation

  16. Mansurian System • Mansur crater • Other impact craters with no bright rays • No evidence for regional volcanic or tectonic activities • ~3(.5) – 1 Ga

  17. Kuiperian Period • ~1 Ga to present • Bright-rayed crater Kuiper • Deposits of impact craters with their bright rays still visible

  18. Messenger • Let us see what’s on the “dark side” • The respective data that is collected will help place together the global geologic sequence together • The data will help piece together the history of Mercury

More Related