APPENDIX I
GLOSSARY
- Aeolian.
- A term applied to wind erosion or deposition of surface
materials.
- Albedo.
- The reflectivity of a body compared with that of a perfectly
diffusing surface at the same distance from the Sun, and normal to
the incident radiation.
- Apoapsis.
- That point in an orbit farthest from the center of attraction.
- Barchan.
- A moving, isolated, crescent shaped dune. The convex surface
points toward the wind.
- Basalt.
- A dark, fine grained volcanic rock. Very common.
- Bench.
- A small terrace or step like ledge breaking the continuity of
a slope.
- Caldera.
- A large volcanic depression containing volcanic vents.
- Catena.
- Crater Chain. A chain or line of craters.
- Cavitation.
- Plucking of material from the floor of a channel caused by the
sharply reduced pressures associated with extreme flow velocities.
- Chaotic terrain.
- A surface consisting of short, jumbled ridges and valleys.
- Chasma.
- Canyon. An elongated, steep sided depression.
- Chondrite.
- A stony meteorite characterized by chondrules embedded in a
finely crystalline matrix consisting of orthopyroxene, olivine,
and nickel iron, with or without glass.
- Collapse pit.
- A closed, rimless depression caused by subsidence.
- Dike.
- A near vertical, planar, volcanic intrusion.
- Ridge(s).
- Irregular, elongate prominence.
- Ejecta.
- Material thrown out of an impact crater during formation. Such
material may be distributed around a crater in distinctive
patterns forming "ejecta rays" or "ejecta loops. "
- Escarpment.
- A long, more or less continuous cliff or relatively steep
slope produced by erosion or faulting. See "scarp "
- Esker.
- A long, low, narrow, sinuous, steep sided ridge or mound
composed of irregularly stratified sand and gravel that was
deposited by a subglacial or englacial stream flowing between ice
walls or in an ice tunnel of a continuously retreating glacier,
left behind when the ice melted.
- Etch pit.
- A surface depression caused by the preferential removal of
less resistant material.
- Fault.
- A surface or zone of rock fracture along which there has been
displacement, from a few centimeters to a few kilometers in scale.
- Folding.
- The curving or bending of a planar structure such as rock
strata, foliation, or cleavage by deformation.
- Fossa (Fossae).
- Ditches. Long, narrow, shallow depressions. They generally
occur in groups and are straight or curved.
- Fretted.
- Eroded in such a manner as to produce two horizontal planar
surfaces separated, by near vertical escarpments.
- Fretted channel.
- Long, relatively wide, flat floored valley with tributaries.
Mass wasting probably played a significant role in their
formation.
- Gelifluction.
- Creep of frozen material.
- Glacioaeolian.
- Material removed from a glacier by wind erosion.
- Graben.
- An elongate, relatively depressed crustal unit or block that
is bounded by faults on its long sides.
- Gradation.
- The leveling of the land, or the bringing of a land surface or
area to a uniform or nearly uniform grade or slope through
erosion, transportation, and deposition.
- Inclination.
- The angle between the plane of an orbit and a reference plane.
The Mars equator is here used as the reference when referring to
spacecraft inclination.
- Interfluve.
- Lying between streams.
- Labyrinthus.
- Valley complex. Complex, intersecting valleys.
- Laminated terrain.
- A surface made of layers of different types of materials;
layered terrain.
- Lava.
- Rock from a volcano, generally molten when ejected.
- Limb.
- The outer edge of a planetary disk.
- Lithosphere.
- The solid outer portion of a planet.
- Mare.
- Low lying, level, relatively smooth, plains like areas of
considerable extent.
- Mass wasting.
- A term that includes all processing by which soil and rock
materials fail and are transported downslope predominantly en
masse by the direct application of gravitational body stresses.
- Mensa (Mensae).
- Mesas. Flat topped prominence with cliff like edges.
- Mons (Montes).
- Mountains. A large topographic prominence or chain of
elevations.
- Normal fault.
- A break in the surface caused by tensional forces.
- Orographic.
- Pertaining to mountains, especially in regard to their
location and distribution.
- Outflow channel.
- A large scale channel that starts at full width in chaotic
terrain and has few, if any, tributaries.
- Overthrusting.
- A low angle thrust fault of large scale, generally measured in
kilometers.
- Pahoehoe.
- A type of lava having a glassy, smooth, and billowy or
undulating surface; it is characteristic of Hawaiian lava.
- Patera.
- Irregular crater or a complex one with scalloped edges.
- Pedestal crater.
- A crater around which less resistant material has been removed
from the ejecta leaving an elevated surface of more resistant
ejecta material.
- Periapsis.
- The orbital point nearest the center of attraction. |
- Periglacial.
- Said of the processes, conditions, areas, climates, and
topographic features at the immediate margins of former and
existing glaciers and ice sheets, and influenced by the cold
temperature of the ice.
- Perihelion.
- That point in the orbit of a planet when it is closest to the
Sun.
- Phase angle.
- The angle between a line from the Sun to the center of a body
and a line from the spacecraft to the center of the same body.
- Planitia.
- Plain. Smooth low area.
- Planum.
- Plateau. Smooth elevated area.
- Pleistocene.
- A recent geologic epoch of the Quaternary period beginning
approximately one million years ago, the last glacial age.
- Polygonal ground.
- Patterned ground marked by polygon like arrangements of rock
or soil. Generally produced on Earth by ice wedge polygons.
- Precessing ellipse.
- An ellipse in which the pole is changing direction.
- Rampart.
- A narrow, wall like ridge.
- Regolith.
- A general term for loose material overlying bedrock.
- Reverse fault.
- See thrust fault.
- Rift.
- A narrow cleft, fissure, or other opening in rock (as in
limestone), made by cracking or splitting.
- Ride.
- Relatively long, trench like valley; has relatively steep
walls and usually flat bottoms.
- Runoff channel.
- Relatively small channel probably caused by water erosion over
a long period.
- Scabland.
- Elevated, essentially flat basalt covered land with only a
thin soil cover.
- Scarp.
- A line of cliffs produced by faulting or by erosion. The term
is an abbreviated form of escarpment, and the two terms commonly
have the same meaning, although "scary" is more often applied to
cliffs formed by faulting.
- Sediment.
- Solid, fragmental material or mass of such material
originating from the weathering of rocks, e.g., sand, gravel, mud,
alluvium.
- Shield volcano.
- A broad, gently sloping volcano.
- Striae.
- Striped ground.
- Subduction zone.
- An elongate region in which a crustal mass descends below
another crustal mass.
- Subsidence.
- A localized gradual downward settling or sinking of a surface
with little or no horizontal movement.
- Tectonic.
- A term pertaining to deformation of a planet's crust,
especially the rock structure and surface forms that result.
- Terminator.
- An imaginary, diffuse line separating the illuminated and dark
portions of a celestial body. There are two terminators: morning
and evening.
- Thermokarst.
- Rimless depressions caused by the melting of ice and
subsequent collapse of the surface.
- Tholus.
- Hill. Isolated domical small mountain or hill.
- Thrust fault.
- A fault caused by compressional forces.
- Transcurrent
faulting.
- A large scale strike slip fault in which the fault surface is
steeply inclined.
- Troposphere.
- The lowest layer in an atmosphere, generally considered to be
10 20 km thick.
- Tuft.
- Volcanic ash, particles of 4 mm diameter or smaller.
- UTC.
- Universal Time Coordinated.
- Unconformity.
- The relationship where the younger upper strata do not follow
the dip and strike of older underlying strata.
- Vallis (Valles).
- Valley. A sinuous channel, many with tributaries. These are
named "Mars" in many languages, e.g., Al Qahira Vallis is derived
from the Arabic word for Mars.
- Vastitas.
- Extensive plain.
- Yardang.
- Elongated, sculpted ridge formed by wind erosion.
SOURCES
American Geological Institute: Glossary of Geology, 1972.
Robert J. Foster: Physical Geology. Charles E. Merrill Publishing
Co., Columbus, Ohio, 1971.
Richard M. Pearl: Geology. Barnes & Noble, Inc., New York,
NY,1969.
G. DeVaucouleurs, et al.: "The New Martian Nomenclature of the
International Astronomical Union,"Icarus26,85 98,1975.
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