Layered Deposits within Unnamed Crater in Arabia Terra (PSP_009180_1840)
Arabia Terra is an area of Mars that has an abundance of layered deposits within impact craters.
The region of Arabia has plateau material that is thought to be part of the
ancient
highland crust that is Noachian in age according to Martian timescale. Thus, the
layered
deposits may represent some of the earliest eroded and infilled materials on
Mars. In this
unnamed crater, we see layering exposed along the margins of a scarp-like bench.
The layering is of particular interest because on Earth, they may represent
multiple
sequences of deposited material or some geologic process (subaerial or
subaqueous) that
has modified and/or deposited material on the surface in some constant fashion.
If the
layered sequences are consistently the same, we can infer that the conditions of
their
deposition were the same for some period of time. If the layers changed in some
way
(e.g., thickens and thins), then we can infer that some condition(s) caused this
to happen.
From these observations and analyses, scientists can attempt to quantify and
reconstruct
what the ancient conditions were like in this region of Mars.