visibility Similar

code Related

The Changing Dunes of Wirtz Crater

description

Summary

The large dark feature is a classic Martian sand dune. Most sand on Earth is made from the mineral quartz, which is white and bright. On Mars, most sand is composed of dark basalt, a volcanic rock. For this reason, dunes on Mars are darker than those on Earth. The dunes in this observation, within Wirtz Crater, are known as "barchans." The steepest slope is on the eastern (right) side, partially in shadow, and represents the direction the dune is migrating as the sand is blown and transported by the wind. Small ripples are visible on much of the dune surface. The dark streaks on the dune are tracks left by passing vortices known to us as dust devils. These raise dust off the dune, revealing a darker substrate. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA12289

NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona

label_outline

Tags

mars mars reconnaissance orbiter mro wirtz crater hirise jpl jet propulsion laboratory dunes wirtz crater high resolution ice nasa
date_range

Date

19/01/2017
place

Location

California Institute of Technology - Jet Propulsion Laboratory ,  34.20139, -118.17341
create

Source

NASA
link

Link

https://images.nasa.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain Dedication (CC0)

label_outline Explore Wirtz, Mars, Hirise

Topics

mars mars reconnaissance orbiter mro wirtz crater hirise jpl jet propulsion laboratory dunes wirtz crater high resolution ice nasa