VENUS TECTONICS - INITIAL ANALYSIS FROM MAGELLAN

被引:104
作者
SOLOMON, SC
HEAD, JW
KAULA, WM
MCKENZIE, D
PARSONS, B
PHILLIPS, RJ
SCHUBERT, G
TALWANI, M
机构
[1] UNIV CAMBRIDGE,BULLARD LABS,CAMBRIDGE CB3 0EZ,ENGLAND
[2] HOUSTON AREA RES CTR,THE WOODLANDS,TX 77381
[3] BROWN UNIV,DEPT GEOL SCI,PROVIDENCE,RI 02912
[4] UNIV CALIF LOS ANGELES,DEPT EARTH & SPACE SCI,LOS ANGELES,CA 90024
[5] SO METHODIST UNIV,DEPT GEOL SCI,DALLAS,TX 75275
[6] UNIV OXFORD,DEPT EARTH SCI,OXFORD OX1 3PR,ENGLAND
关键词
D O I
10.1126/science.252.5003.297
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Radar imaging and altimetry data from the Magellan mission have revealed a diversity of deformational features at a variety of spatial scales on the Venus surface. The plains record a superposition of different episodes of deformation and volcanism; strain is both areally distributed and concentrated into zones of extension and shortening. The common coherence of strain patterns over hundreds of kilometers implies that many features in the plains reflect a crustal response to mantle dynamic processes. Ridge belts and mountain belts represent successive degrees of lithospheric shortening and crustal thickening; the mountain belts also show widespread evidence for extension and collapse both during and following crustal compression. Venus displays two geometrical patterns of concentrated lithospheric extension: quasi-circular coronae and broad rises with linear rift zones; both are sites of significant volcanism. No long, large-offset strike-slip faults have been observed, although limited local horizontal shear is accommodated across many zones of crustal shortening. In general, tectonic features on Venus are unlike those in Earth's oceanic regions in that strain typically is distributed across broad zones that are one to a few hundred kilometers wide, and separated by stronger and less deformed blocks hundreds of kilometers in width, as in actively deforming continental regions on Earth.
引用
收藏
页码:297 / 312
页数:16
相关论文
共 70 条
[1]   QUATERNARY EXTENSION IN SOUTHERN TIBET - FIELD OBSERVATIONS AND TECTONIC IMPLICATIONS [J].
ARMIJO, R ;
TAPPONNIER, P ;
MERCIER, JL ;
HAN, TL .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH AND PLANETS, 1986, 91 (B14) :13803-13872
[2]  
ARVIDSON RE, 1990, P LUNAR PLANET SCI C, V20, P557
[3]  
Barsukov V.L., 1984, GEOKHIMIYA, V12, P1811
[4]   THE GEOLOGY AND GEOMORPHOLOGY OF THE VENUS SURFACE AS REVEALED BY THE RADAR IMAGES OBTAINED BY VENERAS-15 AND VENERAS-16 [J].
BARSUKOV, VL ;
BASILEVSKY, AT ;
BURBA, GA ;
BOBINNA, NN ;
KRYUCHKOV, VP ;
KUZMIN, RO ;
NIKOLAEVA, OV ;
PRONIN, AA ;
RONCA, LB ;
CHERNAYA, IM ;
SHASHKINA, VP ;
GARANIN, AV ;
KUSHKY, ER ;
MARKOV, MS ;
SUKHANOV, AL ;
KOTELNIKOV, VA ;
RZHIGA, ON ;
PETROV, GM ;
ALEXANDROV, YN ;
SIDORENKO, AI ;
BOGOMOLOV, AF ;
SKRYPNIK, GI ;
BERGMAN, MY ;
KUDRIN, LV ;
BOKSHTEIN, IM ;
KRONROD, MA ;
CHOCHIA, PA ;
TYUFLIN, YS ;
KADNICHANSKY, SA ;
AKIM, EL .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH AND PLANETS, 1986, 91 (B4) :D378-D398
[5]  
BASILEVSKIY AT, 1986, GEOTECTONICS+, V20, P282
[6]   STYLES OF TECTONIC DEFORMATIONS ON VENUS - ANALYSIS OF VENERA-15 AND VENERA-16 DATA [J].
BASILEVSKY, AT ;
PRONIN, AA ;
RONCA, LB ;
KRYUCHKOV, VP ;
SUKHANOV, AL ;
MARKOV, MS .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH AND PLANETS, 1986, 91 (B4) :D399-D411
[7]   DIFFUSE-SCATTERING OF RADAR ON THE SURFACE OF VENUS - ORIGIN AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THE DISTRIBUTION OF SOILS [J].
BINDSCHADLER, DL ;
HEAD, JW .
EARTH MOON AND PLANETS, 1988, 42 (02) :133-149
[8]   CHARACTERIZATION OF VENERA-15 VENERA-16 GEOLOGIC UNITS FROM PIONEER VENUS REFLECTIVITY AND ROUGHNESS DATA [J].
BINDSCHADLER, DL ;
HEAD, JW .
ICARUS, 1989, 77 (01) :3-20
[9]   DISTRIBUTION OF TESSERA TERRAIN ON VENUS - PREDICTION FOR MAGELLAN [J].
BINDSCHADLER, DL ;
KRESLAVSKY, MA ;
IVANOV, MA ;
HEAD, JW ;
BASILEVSKY, AT ;
SHKURATOV, YG .
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1990, 17 (02) :171-174
[10]   MANTLE FLOW TECTONICS AND THE ORIGIN OF ISHTAR TERRA, VENUS [J].
BINDSCHADLER, DL ;
SCHUBERT, G ;
KAULA, WM .
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1990, 17 (09) :1345-1348