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Featured researches published by Kenneth L. Tanaka.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Exploring Gusev Crater with Spirit: Review of science objectives and testable hypotheses

Nathalie A. Cabrol; Edmond A. Grin; Michael H. Carr; Brad Sutter; Jeffrey M. Moore; Jack D. Farmer; Ronald Greeley; Ruslan O. Kuzmin; David J. DesMarais; Marc G. Kramer; Horton E. Newsom; Charles Barber; Ivan Thorsos; Kenneth L. Tanaka; Nadine G. Barlow; David A. Fike; Mary L. Urquhart; Brian Grigsby; Frederick D. Grant; Olivier de Goursac

[1]xa0Gusev Crater was selected as the landing site for the Mars Exploration Rover (MER) Spirit mission. Located at the outlet of Maadim Vallis and 250 km south of the volcano Apollinaris Patera, Gusev is an outstanding site to achieve the goals of the MER mission. The crater could have collected sediments from a variety of sources during its 3.9 Ga history, including fluvial, lacustrine, volcanic, glacial, impact, regional and local aeolian, and global air falls. It is a unique site to investigate the past history of water on Mars, climate and geological changes, and the potential habitability of the planet, which are central science objectives of the MER mission. Because of its complex history and potential diversity, Gusev will allow the testing of a large spectrum of hypotheses with the complete suite of MER instruments. Evidence consistent with long-lived lake episodes exist in the landing ellipse area. They might offer a unique opportunity to study, for the first time, Martian aqueous sediments and minerals formed in situ in their geological context. We review the geological history and diversity of the landing site, the science hypotheses that can be tested during the MER mission, and the relevance of Gusev to the MER mission objectives and payload.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1999

General geology and geomorphology of the Mars Pathfinder landing site

A. W. Ward; Lisa R. Gaddis; R. Kirk; L. A. Soderblom; Kenneth L. Tanaka; M. P. Golombek; T. J. Parker; Ronald Greeley; Ruslan O. Kuzmin

The Mars Pathfinder (MPF) spacecraft landed on relatively young (late Hesperian-early Amazonian; 3.1–0.7 Ga) plains in Chryse Planitia near the mouth of Ares Vallis. Images returned from the spacecraft reveal a complex landscape of ridges and troughs, large hills and crater rims, rocks and boulders of various sizes and shapes, and surficial deposits, indicating a complex, multistage geologic history of the landing site. After the deposition of one or more bedrock units, depositional and erosional fluvial processes shaped much of the present landscape. Multiple erosional events are inferred on the basis of observations of numerous channels, different orientations of many streamlined tails from their associated knobs and hills, and superposition of lineations and streamlines. Medium- and small-scale features, interpreted to be related to late-stage drainage of floodwaters, are recognized in several areas at the landing site. Streamlined knobs and hills seen in Viking orbiter images support this inference, as they seem to be complex forms, partly erosional and partly depositional, and may also indicate a series of scouring and depositional events that, in some cases, further eroded or partially buried these landforms. Although features such as these are cited as evidence for catastrophic flooding at Ares Vallis, some of these features may also be ascribed to alternative primary or secondary depositional processes, such as glacial or mass-wasting processes. Close inspection of the landing site reveals rocks that are interpreted to be volcanic in origin and others that may be conglomeratic. If such sedimentary rocks are confirmed, fluvial processes have had a greater significance on Mars than previously thought. For the last several hundred million to few billion years, eolian processes have been dominant. Dunes and dune-like features, ventifacts, and deflation and exhumation features around several rocks probably are the most recent landforms. The relatively pristine nature of the overall landscape at the MPF site suggests weathering and erosion processes on Mars are exceptionally slow.


Archive | 2006

Digital Renovation of the Atlas of Mars 1:15,000,000-Scale Global Geologic Series Maps

James A. Skinner; Trent M. Hare; Kenneth L. Tanaka


Archive | 1986

The Youngest Channel System on Mars

Kenneth L. Tanaka; David H. Scott


Archive | 2009

Geologic Stratigraphy and Evolution of Europa's Surface

T. C. Doggett; Ronald Greeley; Patricio Hernan Figueredo; Kenneth L. Tanaka


Archive | 2009

GIS-based Planetary Geologic Maps: Recommendations for Improved Preparation, Review, and Publication

Trent M. Hare; James A. Skinner; Kenneth L. Tanaka; C. M. Fortezzo; L. F. Bleamaster; Robert Sucharski


Archive | 2008

Global Geologic Map of Europa

E. J. Kolb; Kenneth L. Tanaka; T. C. Doggett; Ronald Greeley; K. Mullins; Patricio Hernan Figueredo; Trent M. Hare; S. Weiser; David A. Senske


Archive | 2008

Evidence for and Implications of Liquefaction in the Vastitas Borealis Marginal Unit in Southern Utopia Planitia, Mars

James A. Skinner; Kenneth L. Tanaka; R. L. Fergason


Archive | 1980

Channeling and Flooding on Mars

Kenneth L. Tanaka; David H. Scott


Archive | 2009

Progress in Global Geologic Mapping of Mars

Kenneth L. Tanaka; James M. Dohm; Rossman P. Irwin; E. J. Kolb; James A. Skinner; Trent M. Hare

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James A. Skinner

United States Geological Survey

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Ronald Greeley

Arizona State University

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Trent M. Hare

United States Geological Survey

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Ruslan O. Kuzmin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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C. M. Fortezzo

United States Geological Survey

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E. J. Kolb

Arizona State University

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David A. Fike

Washington University in St. Louis

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