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Dive into the research topics where Natalie Glines is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalie Glines.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Tsunami waves extensively resurfaced the shorelines of an early Martian ocean

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Alberto G. Fairén; Kenneth L. Tanaka; Mario Zarroca; Rogelio Linares; Thomas Platz; Goro Komatsu; Hideaki Miyamoto; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Jianguo Yan; V. C. Gulick; Kana Higuchi; Victor R. Baker; Natalie Glines

It has been proposed that ~3.4 billion years ago an ocean fed by enormous catastrophic floods covered most of the Martian northern lowlands. However, a persistent problem with this hypothesis is the lack of definitive paleoshoreline features. Here, based on geomorphic and thermal image mapping in the circum-Chryse and northwestern Arabia Terra regions of the northern plains, in combination with numerical analyses, we show evidence for two enormous tsunami events possibly triggered by bolide impacts, resulting in craters ~30 km in diameter and occurring perhaps a few million years apart. The tsunamis produced widespread littoral landforms, including run-up water-ice-rich and bouldery lobes, which extended tens to hundreds of kilometers over gently sloping plains and boundary cratered highlands, as well as backwash channels where wave retreat occurred on highland-boundary surfaces. The ice-rich lobes formed in association with the younger tsunami, showing that their emplacement took place following a transition into a colder global climatic regime that occurred after the older tsunami event. We conclude that, on early Mars, tsunamis played a major role in generating and resurfacing coastal terrains.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Martian outflow channels: How did their source aquifers form, and why did they drain so rapidly?

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Victor R. Baker; V. C. Gulick; Daniel C. Berman; Alberto G. Fairén; Rogelio Linares; Mario Zarroca; Jianguo Yan; Hideaki Miyamoto; Natalie Glines

Catastrophic floods generated ~3.2 Ga by rapid groundwater evacuation scoured the Solar System’s most voluminous channels, the southern circum-Chryse outflow channels. Based on Viking Orbiter data analysis, it was hypothesized that these outflows emanated from a global Hesperian cryosphere-confined aquifer that was infused by south polar meltwater infiltration into the planet’s upper crust. In this model, the outflow channels formed along zones of superlithostatic pressure generated by pronounced elevation differences around the Highland-Lowland Dichotomy Boundary. However, the restricted geographic location of the channels indicates that these conditions were not uniform Boundary. Furthermore, some outflow channel sources are too high to have been fed by south polar basal melting. Using more recent mission data, we argue that during the Late Noachian fluvial and glacial sediments were deposited into a clastic wedge within a paleo-basin located in the southern circum-Chryse region, which was then completely submerged under a primordial northern plains ocean. Subsequent Late Hesperian outflow channels were sourced from within these geologic materials and formed by gigantic groundwater outbursts driven by an elevated hydraulic head from the Valles Marineris region. Thus, our findings link the formation of the southern circum-Chryse outflow channels to ancient marine, glacial, and fluvial erosion and sedimentation.


Journal of Maps | 2018

The Geology of the Navua Valles Region of Mars

Henrik I. Hargitai; V. C. Gulick; Natalie Glines

ABSTRACT The Navua Valles are a system of channels and valleys on the inner rim of Hellas Basin. The aim of this mapping study was to determine the geologic history of the Navua Valles region; and the relationships between the basement, flow, and channel units along the northeastern slope of Hellas Basin. We have produced a 1:1 million scale geologic map of the Navua Valles region, utilizing standard USGS geologic mapping procedures, but not within a regular USGS mapping project. We selected the mapping area boundaries specifically to cover the Navua Valles drainage systems. The primary base of this mapping effort was a mosaic of 161 Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Context Camera images, at approximately 6 m/pixel. This paper is part of a double publication, one paper describing the geology of this area, and this paper presenting the geologic map produced during the investigation.


Astrobiology | 2018

Paleolakes of Northeast Hellas: Precipitation, Groundwater-Fed, and Fluvial Lakes in the Navua–Hadriacus–Ausonia Region, Mars

Henrik I. Hargitai; V. C. Gulick; Natalie Glines

The slopes of northeastern Hellas Basin, Mars exhibit a wide variety of fluvial landforms. In addition to the Dao-Niger-Harmakhis-Reull Valles outflow channels, many smaller channels and valleys cut into this terrain, several of which include discontinuous sections. We have mapped these channels and channel-associated depressions to investigate potential paleolakes from the Navua Valles in the West, through the Hadriacus Mons volcano in the center, to the Ausonia Montes in the East. We have identified three groups of candidate paleolakes at the source regions of major drainages and a fourth paleolake type scattered along the lower reaches of these drainages. Each paleolake group has a distinct character, determined by different formative processes, including precipitation and groundwater for lakes at the channel sources, and fluvially transported water at the lower channel reaches. Only one of these 34 basins had been cataloged previously in paleolake basin databases. Several of these sites are at proximity to the Hadriacus volcanic center, where active dikes during the Hesperian could have produced hydrothermal systems and habitable environments. Deposits within these paleolake depressions and at the termini of channels connected to these candidate paleolakes contain the geological and potentially biological record of these environments.


Icarus | 2014

Evidence for Middle Amazonian catastrophic flooding and glaciation on Mars

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; V. C. Gulick; Victor R. Baker; Thomas Platz; Alberto G. Fairén; Hideaki Miyamoto; Jeffrey S. Kargel; J. W. Rice; Natalie Glines


Icarus | 2015

Did the martian outflow channels mostly form during the Amazonian Period

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Thomas Platz; V. C. Gulick; Victor R. Baker; Alberto G. Fairén; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Jianguo Yan; Hideaki Miyamoto; Natalie Glines


Icarus | 2017

Discontinuous drainage systems formed by highland precipitation and ground-water outflow in the Navua Valles and southwest Hadriacus Mons regions, Mars

Henrik I. Hargitai; V. C. Gulick; Natalie Glines


Icarus | 2015

New insights into the Late Amazonian zonal shrinkage of the martian south polar plateau

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Gregory J. Leonard; Thomas Platz; Kenneth L. Tanaka; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Alberto G. Fairén; V. C. Gulick; Victor R. Baker; Natalie Glines; Hideaki Miyamoto; Yan Jianguo; Midori Oguma


Planetary and Space Science | 2016

Groundwater flow induced collapse and flooding in Noctis Labyrinthus, Mars

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Mario Zarroca; Rogelio Linares; V. C. Gulick; Catherine M. Weitz; Jianguo Yan; Alberto G. Fairén; Hideaki Miyamoto; Thomas Platz; Victor R. Baker; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Natalie Glines; Kana Higuchi


Scientific Reports | 2015

Erratum: Martian outflow channels: How did their source aquifers form, and why did they drain so rapidly? (Scientific Reports (2015) 5(13404) 10.1038/srep13404)

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Victor R. Baker; V. C. Gulick; Daniel C. Berman; Alberto G. Fairén; Rogelio Linares; Mario Zarroca; Jianguo Yan; Hideaki Miyamoto; Natalie Glines

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Thomas Platz

Planetary Science Institute

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Mario Zarroca

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Rogelio Linares

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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