End of the Line

Scaled Image

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU

About this image

Today's VIS image shows the the westernmost edge of Daedalia Planum. The volcanic flow on the right side of the image is butting up against the higher hills of Terra Sirenum.

Daedalia Planum is comprised of the immense lava flows that originated from Arsia Mons. Arsia Mons is the southernmost of the three large aligned volcanoes in the Tharsis region. Arsia Mons' last eruption was 10s of million years ago. The different surface textures are created by differences in the lava viscosity and cooling rates. The lobate margins of each flow can be traced back to the start of each flow -- or to the point where they are covered by younger flows. Flows in Daedalia Planum can be as long as 180 km (111 miles). For comparison the longest Hawaiian lava flow is only 51 km (~31 miles) long. The total area of Daedalia Planum is 2.9 million square km – more than four times the size of Texas.

Please see the THEMIS Data Citation Note for details on crediting THEMIS images. 

Context

-20.7043
212.931
100651
2024-08-22 20:37
Fri, 2025-02-07
VIS
512 pixels (17 km)
1824 pixels (63 km)
0.034796 km/pixel
0.0350851 km/pixel

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