Difference between revisions of "Burroughs Crater"

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File:Burroughsthemis.jpg|Picture of part of Burroughs Crater, as seen by THEMIS
 
File:Burroughsthemis.jpg|Picture of part of Burroughs Crater, as seen by THEMIS
 
File:Burroughscratertopo.jpg|Topo map showing Burroughs Crater and other nearby features.
 
File:Burroughscratertopo.jpg|Topo map showing Burroughs Crater and other nearby features.
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File:Burroughsctx2.jpg|Picture of eastern part of Burroughs Crater, as seen by CTX  Click on image to see fine detail of layers.
 
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An ice deposit in Burroughs Crater contains strong evidence that recent Martian climate is influenced by changes in the planet's orbit and axial tilt.<ref>https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2021GL097450</ref> <ref>Sori, M., et al.  2022.  Orbital Forcing of Martian Climate Revealed in a South Polar Outlier Ice Deposit.  Geophysical Research Letters.  49:6. e2021GL097450</ref> <ref>https://phys.org/news/2022-03-mounds-ice-craters-insight-mars.html?fbclid=IwAR3NCXL54r5BWWevZhY1fusERFiIElBOpKmNxByP0auxi_ecPjF6oLHbBv0</ref>
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An ice deposit in Burroughs Crater contains strong evidence that recent Martian climate is influenced by changes in the planet's orbit and axial tilt.<ref>https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2021GL097450</ref> <ref>Sori, M., et al.  2022.  Orbital Forcing of Martian Climate Revealed in a South Polar Outlier Ice Deposit.  Geophysical Research Letters.  49:6. e2021GL097450</ref>  
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<ref>https://phys.org/news/2022-03-mounds-ice-craters-insight-mars.html?fbclid=IwAR3NCXL54r5BWWevZhY1fusERFiIElBOpKmNxByP0auxi_ecPjF6oLHbBv0</ref>
  
 
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<gallery class="center"  widths="380px" heights="360px">
File:Burroughslayers.jpg|Layers in Burroughs Crater.  These have been shown to be controlled by changes in the tilt of axis.  This image is an enlarged part of the above THEMIS image.   
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File:Burroughslayers.jpg|Layers in Burroughs Crater.  These have been shown to be controlled by changes in the tilt of axis.  This image is an enlarged part of the above THEMIS image and the CTX image.   
 
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Latest revision as of 18:03, 4 April 2022

Burroughs Crater lies at latitude 72.5S and longitude 243.1W. It is in the Mare Australe quadrangle and is 104.0 kilometres (64.6 mi) in diameter.[1] It is named after Edgar Rice Burroughs, an American science fiction novelist who wrote a series of fantasy novels Mars Science Fiction set on Mars.

An ice deposit in Burroughs Crater contains strong evidence that recent Martian climate is influenced by changes in the planet's orbit and axial tilt.[2] [3]

[4]


References

See also