4.5 Article

Is the primordial crust of Mars magnetized?

Journal

ICARUS
Volume 221, Issue 1, Pages 192-207

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2012.07.030

Keywords

Mars

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada

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A meteorite impact capable of creating a 200 km diameter crater can demagnetize the entire crust beneath, and produce an appreciable magnetic anomaly at satellite altitudes of similar to 400 km in case the pre-existing crust is magnetized. In this study we examine the magnetic field over all of the craters and impact-related Quasi-Circular Depressions (QCDs) with diameters larger than 200 km that are located on the highlands of Mars, excluding the Tharsis bulge, in order to estimate the mean magnetization of the highland crust. Using the surface topography and the gravity of Mars we first identify those QCDs that are likely produced by impacts. The magnetic map of a given crater or impact-related QCD is derived using the Mars Global Surveyor high-altitude nighttime radial magnetic data. Two extended ancient areas are identified on the highlands, the South Province and the Tempe Terra, which have large number of craters and impact-related QCDs but none of them has an appreciable magnetic signature. The primordial crust of these areas is not magnetized, or is very weakly magnetized at most. We examine some plausible scenarios to explain the weak magnetization of these areas, and conclude that no strong dynamo existed in the first similar to 100 Myr of Mars' history when the newly formed primordial crust was cooling below the magnetic blocking temperatures of its minerals. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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