The Geology of Mars

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 25

  • @jakehossack4295
    @jakehossack4295 3 года назад +9

    jake hossack. As a retired professional geologist, I found this one of the most stunning RUclips scientific lectures I have seen. Martian Rovers are fascinating and the old field geologist can recognize onlap, downlap, and progradation. Plus the joints, veins, and microconcretions. But to have them explained was stunning. Also the inverted river channels were something really new. And the ice-regolith glaciers, and eskers!. Hope I'm still around in 2024.

    • @sabaris.s8875
      @sabaris.s8875 15 дней назад

      Hlo sir....nice to hear you...I am a first semester Bsc Geology student

  • @VoloviaUk
    @VoloviaUk 2 года назад +1

    Thanks Matt, nice to see you again after a few years (I am the Italian lunar guy working in Macao, UCL times...).

  • @MrGoblin60
    @MrGoblin60 3 года назад +2

    How are elevations determined on Mars? Since there is no extant "sea level" what is used as a consistent 0 metres/feet reference point?

  • @greguir
    @greguir 3 года назад +1

    thank you very much for this very very good presentation !
    (cut out mid-low frequencies out of the voice with an EQ to make the speach easier to understand)

  • @fossilphil
    @fossilphil 3 года назад +3

    Really fascinating. Is there any evidence of plate tectonics or large scale geological structures?

  • @dancooper8551
    @dancooper8551 3 года назад

    Excellent presentation and material.

  • @sayantanghosh6714
    @sayantanghosh6714 2 года назад

    Good knowledge. Thank you!

  • @granthildreth9230
    @granthildreth9230 2 года назад +1

    I’m regards to the evidence of thrust faults, transtentional settings, and the rift zones; how is this explained without tectonics? Have you ever considered the idea of slab rollback as it interacts with core boundary. And if you were to have hydration in the early days of Mars that is now “trapped below the surface” how was it to permeate the mantle without any form of tectonics. Is it possible that that the one plate was impacted and resulted in a small break up of plates which resulted not only in the uplift of tharsis(due to crustal thinning) but also initiated a brief period of tectonic activity resulting in slab detachment???

  • @shaunlanighan813
    @shaunlanighan813 3 года назад

    What shall I watch with breakfast? I know, I'll have a look at Mars! God bless all those involved in the production of this, not least those mechanical extensions of their minds.

  • @agito289
    @agito289 3 года назад +3

    Isn't the Mars aircraft called Ingenuity?

  • @Knaeben
    @Knaeben 11 месяцев назад

    Despite the atmosphere on Mars, it is essentially the same as standing on the Moon.

  • @SatyendraSingh-vq9cl
    @SatyendraSingh-vq9cl Год назад

    Very, good make available for students of poor country like india later they will provide moral boosting wishes to you

  • @bobdelabourer1307
    @bobdelabourer1307 2 года назад

    what if the white frozen stuff is dry ice? is it ccold enough to precipitate CO2?/

  • @advwharton
    @advwharton 3 года назад +3

    Interesting lecture. Marred by to many adverts.

    • @shadeburst
      @shadeburst 4 месяца назад

      I am not a paid RUclips subscriber so to help these guys pay the rent, I usually watch twice, once with Skip and once I leave it to play all the three minute ads while I do something else.

  • @kiwibacon99
    @kiwibacon99 2 года назад

    So many commercials……, it’s great info, but I can’t deal w so many ads

  • @Spook291
    @Spook291 Год назад

    34:34

  • @cmg1819
    @cmg1819 Год назад

    Only got 20 mins in. The amount of ads make this unwatchable

  • @shadeburst
    @shadeburst 4 месяца назад

    I wouldn't join a crewed Mars mission at any price. I've seen radiation sickness and it's not at all pleasant!

  • @JMDinOKC
    @JMDinOKC 3 года назад +1

    The Open University? Don't they have a roof?