Skip to Main Content
Skip Nav Destination
GEOREF RECORD

Megafloods and global paleoenvironmental change on Mars and Earth

Victor R. Baker
Megafloods and global paleoenvironmental change on Mars and Earth (in Preservation of random megascale events on Mars and Earth; influence on geologic history, Mary G. Chapman (editor) and Laszlo P. Keszthelyi (editor))
Special Paper - Geological Society of America (2009) 453: 25-36

Abstract

The surface of Mars preserves landforms associated with the largest known water floods. While most of these megafloods occurred more than 1 Ga ago, recent spacecraft images document a phase of outburst flooding and associated volcanism that seems no older than tens of millions of years. The megafloods that formed the Martian outflow channels had maximum discharges comparable to those of Earth's ocean currents and its thermohaline circulation. On both Earth and Mars, abrupt and episodic operations of these megascale processes have been major factors in global climatic change. On relatively short time scales, by their influence on oceanic circulation, Earth's Pleistocene megafloods probably (1) induced the Younger Dryas cooling of 12.8 ka ago, and (2) initiated the Bond cycles of ocean-climate oscillation with their associated Heinrich events of "iceberg armadas" into the North Atlantic. The Martian megafloods are hypothesized to have induced the episodic formation of a northern plains "ocean," which, with contemporaneous volcanism, led to relatively brief periods of enhanced hydrological cycling on the land surface (the "MEGAOUTFLO Hypothesis"). This process of episodic short-duration climate change on Mars, operating at intervals of hundreds of millions of years, has parallels in the Neoproterozoic glaciation of Earth (the "Snowball Earth Hypothesis"). Both phenomena are theorized to involve abrupt and spectacular planet-wide climate oscillations, and associated feedbacks with ocean circulation, land-surface weathering, glaciation, and atmospheric carbon dioxide. The critical factors for megascale environmental change on both Mars and Earth seem to be associated tectonics and volcanism, plus the abundance of water for planetary cycling. Some of the most important events in planetary history, including those of the biosphere, seem to be tied to cataclysmic episodes of massive hydrological change.


ISSN: 0072-1077
EISSN: 2331-219X
Coden: GSAPAZ
Serial Title: Special Paper - Geological Society of America
Serial Volume: 453
Title: Megafloods and global paleoenvironmental change on Mars and Earth
Title: Preservation of random megascale events on Mars and Earth; influence on geologic history
Author(s): Baker, Victor R.
Author(s): Chapman, Mary G.editor
Author(s): Keszthelyi, Laszlo P.editor
Affiliation: University of Arizona, Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, Tucson, AZ, United States
Affiliation: U. S. Geological Survey, Flagstaff, AZ, United States
Pages: 25-36
Published: 2009
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
References: 124
Accession Number: 2009-074401
Categories: Extraterrestrial geologyQuaternary geology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 3 tables
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 200940

or Create an Account

Close Modal
Close Modal