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An atlas of Mars sedimentary rocks as seen by HiRISE

January 1, 2012

Images of distant and unknown places have long stimulated the imaginations of both explorers and scientists. The atlas of photographs collected during the Hayden (1872)expedition to the Yellowstone region was essential to its successful advocacy and selection in 1872 as America’s first national park. Photographer William Henry Jackson of the Hayden expedition captured the public’s imagination and support, returning home with a treasure of images that confirmed the existence of western landmarks previously regarded as glorified myths: the Grand Tetons, Old Faithful, and strange pools of boiling hot mud. Fifty years later, photographer Ansel Adams began his long legacy of providing the public with compilations of iconic images of natural wonders that many only see in prints.

Photography in space has provided its own bounty. Who can forget the first image of Earthrise taken by astronaut William Anders in 1968 from Apollo 8; the solemnity of the first photos of the surface of the Moon from the Apollo 11 astronauts; and the startling discovery of the tallest mountain in the solar system (Olympus Mons) on the surface of Mars in images sent from Mariner 9? The images from Mariner 9 also allowed for a game-changing discovery. Earlier, based on very limited Mariner 4 data that covered less than 10% of the planet’s surface, Chapman et al. (1968) speculated that “If substantial aqueous erosion features—such as river valleys— were produced during earlier epochs of Mars, we should not expect any trace of them to be visible.

Publication Year 2012
Title An atlas of Mars sedimentary rocks as seen by HiRISE
DOI 10.2110/pec.12.102.0049
Authors Ross Beyer, Kathryn M. Stack, Jennifer L. Griffes, Ralph E. Milliken, Kenneth E. Herkenhoff, Shane Byrne, John W. Holt, John P. Grotzinger
Publication Type Book Chapter
Publication Subtype Book Chapter
Index ID 70156381
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Astrogeology Science Center