Mars
has some of the most highly varied and interesting terrain of any of the terrestrial planets, some of it quite spectacular:
·
Olympus Mons: the largest mountain in the Solar System rising 24 km (78,000 ft.) above the surrounding plain. Its
base is more than 500 km in diameter and is rimmed by a cliff 6 km (20,000 ft) high.
·
Tharsis: a huge bulge on the Martian surface that is about 4000 km across and 10 km high.
·
Valles Marineris: a system of canyons 4000 km long and from 2 to 7 km deep (top of page);
·
Hellas Planitia: an impact crater in the southern hemisphere over 6 km deep and 2000 km in diameter.
Much of the Martian surface
is very old and cratered, but there are also much younger rift valleys, ridges, hills and plains. (None of this is visible
in any detail with a telescope, even the Hubble Space Telescope; all this information comes from the spacecraft that we've
sent to Mars.)
Southern Highlands
The
southern hemisphere of Mars is predominantly ancient cratered highlands somewhat similar to the Moon. In contrast, most of
the northern hemisphere consists of plains which are much younger, lower in elevation and have a much more complex history.
An abrupt elevation change of several kilometers seems to occur at the boundary. The reasons for this global dichotomy and
abrupt boundary are unknown (some speculate that they are due to a very large impact shortly after Mars' accretion). Mars
Global Surveyor has produced a nice 3D map of Mars that clearly shows these features.
The
interior of Mars is known only by inference from data about the surface and the bulk statistics of the planet. The most likely
scenario is a dense core about 1700 km in radius, a molten rocky mantle somewhat denser than the Earth's and a thin crust.
Data from Mars Global Surveyor indicates that Mars' crust is about 80 km thick in the southern hemisphere but only about 35
km thick in the north. Mars' relatively low density compared to the other terrestrial planets indicates that its core probably
contains a relatively large fraction of sulfur in addition to iron (iron and iron sulfide).
Like
Mercury and the Moon, Mars appears to lack active plate tectonics at present; there is no evidence of recent horizontal motion
of the surface such as the folded mountains so common on Earth. With no lateral plate motion, hot-spots under the crust stay
in a fixed position relative to the surface. This, along with the lower surface gravity, may account for the Tharis bulge
and its enormous volcanoes. There is no evidence of current volcanic activity. However, data from Mars Global Surveyor indicates
that Mars very likely did have tectonic activity sometime in the past.