The Martian highlands contain Noachian-aged areally-extensive (>225 km2) bedrock exposures that have been mapped using thermal and visible imaging datasets. Given their age, crater density and impact gardening should have led to the formation of decameter scale layers of regolith that would overlie and bury these outcrops if composed of competent materials like basaltic lavas. However, many of these regions lack thick regolith layers and show clear exposures of bedrock materials with elevated thermal inertia values compared to the global average. Hypothesized reasons for the lack of regolith include: (a) relatively weaker material properties than lavas, where friable materials are comminuted and deflated during wind erosion, (b) long-term protection from regolith development through burial and later exhumation through one or more surface processes, and (c) spatially concentrated aeolian erosion and wind energetics on well-lithified basaltic substrates. To test the third hypothesis, we used the Mars Regional Atmospheric Modeling System to calculate wind erosive strength at 10 regions throughout the Martian highlands and compared it to their thermophysical properties by using thermal infrared data derived from the Thermal Emission Spectrometer to understand the effect that Amazonian mesoscale wind patterns may have on the exposure of bedrock. We also investigated the effect of planet obliquity, Ls of perihelion, and atmospheric mean pressure on wind erosion potential. We found no evidence for increased aeolian activity over bedrock-containing regions relative to surrounding terrains, including at the mafic floor unit at Jezero crater (Máaz formation), supporting the first or second hypotheses for these regions.
Keywords: Mars; atmosphere; bedrock exposures; erosional processes; material properties; mesoscale.
© 2022. The Authors.