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Dive into the research topics where Stephanie C. Werner is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephanie C. Werner.


Nature | 2004

Recent and episodic volcanic and glacial activity on Mars revealed by the High Resolution Stereo Camera

G. Neukum; R. Jaumann; Harald Hoffmann; E. Hauber; James W. Head; Alexander T. Basilevsky; B. Ivanov; Stephanie C. Werner; S. van Gasselt; J. B. Murray; T. McCord

The large-area coverage at a resolution of 10–20 metres per pixel in colour and three dimensions with the High Resolution Stereo Camera Experiment on the European Space Agency Mars Express Mission has made it possible to study the time-stratigraphic relationships of volcanic and glacial structures in unprecedented detail and give insight into the geological evolution of Mars. Here we show that calderas on five major volcanoes on Mars have undergone repeated activation and resurfacing during the last 20 per cent of martian history, with phases of activity as young as two million years, suggesting that the volcanoes are potentially still active today. Glacial deposits at the base of the Olympus Mons escarpment show evidence for repeated phases of activity as recently as about four million years ago. Morphological evidence is found that snow and ice deposition on the Olympus construct at elevations of more than 7,000 metres led to episodes of glacial activity at this height. Even now, water ice protected by an insulating layer of dust may be present at high altitudes on Olympus Mons.


Nature | 2005

Tropical to mid-latitude snow and ice accumulation, flow and glaciation on Mars

James W. Head; G. Neukum; R. Jaumann; Harald Hiesinger; E. Hauber; Michael H. Carr; P. Masson; Bernard H. Foing; Hans-jurgen Hoffmann; M. A. Kreslavsky; Stephanie C. Werner; S. M. Milkovich; S. van Gasselt

Images from the Mars Express HRSC (High-Resolution Stereo Camera) of debris aprons at the base of massifs in eastern Hellas reveal numerous concentrically ridged lobate and pitted features and related evidence of extremely ice-rich glacier-like viscous flow and sublimation. Together with new evidence for recent ice-rich rock glaciers at the base of the Olympus Mons scarp superposed on larger Late Amazonian debris-covered piedmont glaciers, we interpret these deposits as evidence for geologically recent and recurring glacial activity in tropical and mid-latitude regions of Mars during periods of increased spin-axis obliquity when polar ice was mobilized and redeposited in microenvironments at lower latitudes. The data indicate that abundant residual ice probably remains in these deposits and that these records of geologically recent climate changes are accessible to future automated and human surface exploration.


Nature | 2005

Evidence from the Mars Express High Resolution Stereo Camera for a frozen sea close to Mars' equator

J. B. Murray; Jan-Peter Muller; Gerhard Neukum; Stephanie C. Werner; Stephan van Gasselt; Ernst Hauber; Wojciech J. Markiewicz; James W. Head; Bernard H. Foing; David P. Page; Karl L. Mitchell; Ganna Portyankina

It is thought that the Cerberus Fossae fissures on Mars were the source of both lava and water floods two to ten million years ago. Evidence for the resulting lava plains has been identified in eastern Elysium, but seas and lakes from these fissures and previous water flooding events were presumed to have evaporated and sublimed away. Here we present High Resolution Stereo Camera images from the European Space Agency Mars Express spacecraft that indicate that such lakes may still exist. We infer that the evidence is consistent with a frozen body of water, with surface pack-ice, around 5° north latitude and 150° east longitude in southern Elysium. The frozen lake measures about 800 × 900 km in lateral extent and may be up to 45 metres deep—similar in size and depth to the North Sea. From crater counts, we determined its age to be 5 ± 2 million years old. If our interpretation is confirmed, this is a place that might preserve evidence of primitive life, if it has ever developed on Mars.


Nature | 2005

Discovery of a flank caldera and very young glacial activity at Hecates Tholus, Mars

E. Hauber; S. van Gasselt; B. Ivanov; Stephanie C. Werner; James W. Head; G. Neukum; R. Jaumann; R. Greeley; K.L. Mitchell; P. Muller; Hrsc Co-Investigator Team

The majority of volcanic products on Mars are thought to be mafic and effusive. Explosive eruptions of basic to ultrabasic chemistry are expected to be common, but evidence for them is rare and mostly confined to very old surface features. Here we present new image and topographic data from the High Resolution Stereo Camera that reveal previously unknown traces of an explosive eruption at 30° N and 149° E on the northwestern flank of the shield volcano Hecates Tholus. The eruption created a large, 10-km-diameter caldera ∼350 million years ago. We interpret these observations to mean that large-scale explosive volcanism on Mars was not confined to the planets early evolution. We also show that glacial deposits partly fill the caldera and an adjacent depression. Their age, derived from crater counts, is about 5 to 24 million years. Climate models predict that near-surface ice is not stable at mid-latitudes today, assuming a thermo-dynamic steady state. Therefore, the discovery of very young glacial features at Hecates Tholus suggests recent climate changes. We show that the absolute ages of these very recent glacial deposits correspond very well to a period of increased obliquity of the planets rotational axis.


Geological Society, London, Memoirs | 2011

Chapter 3 Circum-Arctic mapping project: new magnetic and gravity anomaly maps of the Arctic

Carmen Gaina; Stephanie C. Werner; Richard W. Saltus; Stefan Maus

Abstract New Circum-Arctic maps of magnetic and gravity anomalies have been produced by merging regional gridded data. Satellite magnetic and gravity data were used for quality control of the long wavelengths of the new compilations. The new Circum-Arctic digital compilations of magnetic, gravity and some of their derivatives have been analyzed together with other freely available regional and global data and models in order to provide a consistent view of the tectonically complex Arctic basins and surrounding continents. Sharp, linear contrasts between deeply buried basement blocks with different magnetic properties and densities that can be identified on these maps can be used, together with other geological and geophysical information, to refine the tectonic boundaries of the Arctic domain.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Continental crust beneath southeast Iceland

Trond H. Torsvik; Hans E. F. Amundsen; Reidar G. Trønnes; Pavel V. Doubrovine; Carmen Gaina; N. J. Kusznir; Bernhard Steinberger; Fernando Corfu; Lewis D. Ashwal; William L. Griffin; Stephanie C. Werner; Bjørn Jamtveit

Significance The Iceland hotspot is widely thought to be the surface expression of a deep mantle plume from the core–mantle boundary that can be traced back in time at least 62 My. However, some lavas contain continental material, which has previously been proposed to have been recycled through the plume. Here, we argue that the plume split off a sliver of continent from Greenland in the Early Eocene. This sliver is now located beneath southeast Iceland where it locally contaminates some of the plume-derived magmas. The magmatic activity (0–16 Ma) in Iceland is linked to a deep mantle plume that has been active for the past 62 My. Icelandic and northeast Atlantic basalts contain variable proportions of two enriched components, interpreted as recycled oceanic crust supplied by the plume, and subcontinental lithospheric mantle derived from the nearby continental margins. A restricted area in southeast Iceland—and especially the Öræfajökull volcano—is characterized by a unique enriched-mantle component (EM2-like) with elevated 87Sr/86Sr and 207Pb/204Pb. Here, we demonstrate through modeling of Sr–Nd–Pb abundances and isotope ratios that the primitive Öræfajökull melts could have assimilated 2–6% of underlying continental crust before differentiating to more evolved melts. From inversion of gravity anomaly data (crustal thickness), analysis of regional magnetic data, and plate reconstructions, we propose that continental crust beneath southeast Iceland is part of ∼350-km-long and 70-km-wide extension of the Jan Mayen Microcontinent (JMM). The extended JMM was marginal to East Greenland but detached in the Early Eocene (between 52 and 47 Mya); by the Oligocene (27 Mya), all parts of the JMM permanently became part of the Eurasian plate following a westward ridge jump in the direction of the Iceland plume.


Science | 2014

The Source Crater of Martian Shergottite Meteorites

Stephanie C. Werner; Anouck Ody; F. Poulet

Sourcing Martian Meteorites There are nearly 150 recognized martian meteorites, but where exactly they came from on Mars is not known. Werner et al. (p. 1343, published online 6 March) present evidence that the <5 million-year-old Mojave impact crater on Mars is the single ejection site of one type of martian meteorites: the shergottites. The Mojave crater formed on an ancient terrain on Mars, and so the shergottites represent old martian crustal material. Martian meteorites originated from the 3- to 5-million-year-old Mojave impact crater. Absolute ages for planetary surfaces are often inferred by crater densities and only indirectly constrained by the ages of meteorites. We show that the <5 million-year-old and 55-km-wide Mojave Crater on Mars is the ejection source for the meteorites classified as shergottites. Shergottites and this crater are linked by their coinciding meteorite ejection ages and the crater formation age and by mineralogical constraints. Because Mojave formed on 4.3 billion–year-old terrain, the original crystallization ages of shergottites are old, as inferred by Pb-Pb isotope ratios, and the much-quoted shergottite ages of <600 million years are due to resetting. Thus, the cratering-based age determination method for Mars is now calibrated in situ, and it shifts the absolute age of the oldest terrains on Mars backward by 200 million years.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2011

Palaeoposition of the Seychelles microcontinent in relation to the Deccan Traps and the Plume Generation Zone in Late Cretaceous-Early Palaeogene time

Morgan Ganerød; Trond H. Torsvik; D. J. J. van Hinsbergen; Carmen Gaina; Fernando Corfu; Stephanie C. Werner; T.M. Owen-Smith; Lewis D. Ashwal; Simon J. Webb; Bart Willem Hendrik Hendriks

Abstract The Early Palaeogene magmatic rocks of North and Silhouette Islands in the Seychelles contain clues to the Cenozoic geodynamic puzzle of the Indian Ocean, but have so far lacked precise geochronological data and palaeomagnetic constraints. New 40Ar/39Ar and U–Pb dates demonstrate that these rocks were emplaced during magnetochron C28n; however, 40Ar/39Ar and palaeomagnetic data from Silhouette indicate that this complex experienced a protracted period of cooling. The Seychelles palaeomagnetic pole (57.55°S and 114.22°E; A9512.3°, N=14) corresponds to poles of similar ages from the Deccan Traps after being corrected for a clockwise rotation of 29.4°±12.9°. This implies that Seychelles acted as an independent microplate between the Indian and African plates during and possibly after C27r time, confirming recent results based on kinematic studies. Our reconstruction confirms that the eruption of the Deccan Traps, which affected both India and the Seychelles and triggered continental break-up, can be linked to the present active Reunion hotspot, which is being sourced as a deep plume from the Plume Generation Zone. Supplementary material: Experimental data are available at http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18482.


Astrobiology | 2017

Habitability on Early Mars and the Search for Biosignatures with the ExoMars Rover

Jorge L. Vago; Frances Westall; A. J. Coates; R. Jaumann; Oleg Korablev; Valérie Ciarletti; Igor Mitrofanov; Jean-Luc Josset; Maria Cristina De Sanctis; Jean-Pierre Bibring; Fernando Rull; Fred Goesmann; Harald Steininger; W. Goetz; William B. Brinckerhoff; Cyril Szopa; F. Raulin; Howell G. M. Edwards; Lyle G. Whyte; Alberto G. Fairén; John C. Bridges; Ernst Hauber; Gian Gabriele Ori; Stephanie C. Werner; D. Loizeau; Ruslan O. Kuzmin; Rebecca M. E. Williams; Jessica Flahaut; F. Forget; Daniel Rodionov

Abstract The second ExoMars mission will be launched in 2020 to target an ancient location interpreted to have strong potential for past habitability and for preserving physical and chemical biosignatures (as well as abiotic/prebiotic organics). The mission will deliver a lander with instruments for atmospheric and geophysical investigations and a rover tasked with searching for signs of extinct life. The ExoMars rover will be equipped with a drill to collect material from outcrops and at depth down to 2 m. This subsurface sampling capability will provide the best chance yet to gain access to chemical biosignatures. Using the powerful Pasteur payload instruments, the ExoMars science team will conduct a holistic search for traces of life and seek corroborating geological context information. Key Words: Biosignatures—ExoMars—Landing sites—Mars rover—Search for life. Astrobiology 17, 471–510.


Surveys in Geophysics | 2014

4D Arctic: A Glimpse into the Structure and Evolution of the Arctic in the Light of New Geophysical Maps, Plate Tectonics and Tomographic Models

Carmen Gaina; Sergei Medvedev; Trond H. Torsvik; Ivan Koulakov; Stephanie C. Werner

Knowledge about the Arctic tectonic structure has changed in the last decade as a large number of new datasets have been collected and systematized. Here, we review the most updated, publicly available Circum-Arctic digital compilations of magnetic and gravity data together with new models of the Arctic’s crust. Available tomographic models have also been scrutinized and evaluated for their potential to reveal the deeper structure of the Arctic region. Although the age and opening mechanisms of the Amerasia Basin are still difficult to establish in detail, interpreted subducted slabs that reside in the High Arctic’s lower mantle point to one or two episodes of subduction that consumed crust of possibly Late Cretaceous–Jurassic age. The origin of major igneous activity during the Cretaceous in the central Arctic (the Alpha–Mendeleev Ridge) and in the proximity of rifted margins (the so-called High Arctic Large Igneous Province—HALIP) is still debated. Models of global plate circuits and the connection with the deep mantle are used here to re-evaluate a possible link between Arctic volcanism and mantle plumes.

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G. Neukum

Free University of Berlin

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Boris A. Ivanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Gerhard Neukum

Free University of Berlin

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Ronald Greeley

Arizona State University

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R. Jaumann

German Aerospace Center

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