Status Report

NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter HiRISE Imagery Release 26 December 2007

By SpaceRef Editor
December 26, 2007
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NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter HiRISE Imagery Release 26 December 2007
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Onboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, the HiRISE camera offers unprecedented image quality, giving us a view of the Red Planet in a way never before seen. It’s the most powerful camera ever to leave Earth’s orbit.


South Polar Layered Deposits and Residual Ice Cap South Polar Layered Deposits and Residual Ice Cap
A wide variety of south polar terrains are on display in this spectacular HiRISE color image.
 
Repeated Erosion and Deposition in the South Polar Layered Deposits Repeated Erosion and Deposition in the South Polar Layered Deposits
These deposits, like the north polar layered deposits, are thought to contain a record of global climate changes on Mars.
 
Crater on the South Polar Layered Deposits Crater on the South Polar Layered Deposits
An example of “angular unconformity,” where layers do not conform to each other across a boundary.
 
Distorted Layers in the South Polar Layered Deposits Distorted Layers in the South Polar Layered Deposits
What’s striking in this observation is that the layers are not flat-lying, but appear wavy.
 
Impact Crater on the South Polar Layered Deposits Impact Crater on the South Polar Layered Deposits
Layers in the polar regions are of great interest since they contain records of past planetary conditions.
 
South Polar Layered Deposits South Polar Layered Deposits
Polar layered deposits are interesting because they were probably formed by global climate changes on Mars, like ice ages on Earth.
 


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