Odyssey image
Vital Statistics
Location:
-28.2N, 8.7E
Released:
2003-08-28
Image Size:
17.4 x 62.0 km, 1024 x 3648 px
Resolution: 17m Instrument: VIS
Medium-size image for 20030828a
Image Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU
 
Image Context:
Context image for 20030828a
Wide Context:
Wide context image for 20030828a
Context image credit: NASA/JPL/MOLA
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Detailed information on this image is available at the THEMIS Data Releases website.
 
Please see the THEMIS Data Citation Note for details on crediting THEMIS images.
 
This image shows an area not too far south of Meridiani, the area where the mineral hematite was found on the Martian surface. In the center of the image the terrain becomes quite rugged, where a great amount of material has eroded away, leaving behind buttes and mesas. Note how some of the mesas are quite circular in morphology. This is an example of "inverted terrain", in which a topographically low feature, like a crater or a trench, becomes filled in with material. Later, the surrounding terrain erodes away from the topographically low feature, while the feature protects the material filling it. Small regions of mega-ripples (a duneform) are located in some of the depressions at the center of the image.
 
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THEMIS Image of the Day: Upside-down craters (Released 28 August 2003)