I think there is a remarkable ongoing process of rock formation that is occurring on the surface of Mars.
The process is in clear view in several images from the MER and MSL rovers and appears to be the
most active process on Mars surface today but seems to be somehow invisible to most observers.
This presentation, albiet with no geology underpinning, is an attempt to elicit reasoned contrary or
positive comments on the above from fellow MRB posters.
The process appears to be made up of the following elements:
a dark fluid flows down the slopes from underneath some rocks on elevated slopes
The fluid congeals into a characteristic shape not far from where it originated
More episodes of fluid expression leads to buildup of characteristically shaped laminae
Groups of laminae form terraces downslope from the rocks where the flows originated
Terraces develop into rock formations. Veins are probably involved in this process
The cycle probably continues with new flows from below new rock formations carrying on the
process which must have a renewable energy source besides wind or gravity to sustain it over
decades and millennia.
This alternative explanation suggests that such rocks on Mars are younger than currently estimated.
Rocks form
from Terraces
Terraces form
from groups of
Laminae
Residues build up
to form Laminae
with characteristic
textures
Note
The origins of the darker flows
Note the difference between the
texture of the solidified crust and
the normal soil surface as well as the
liquid appearance of the new flows
Note the accretion of the flows into
the beginnings of laminar structures
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Note:
Shallow emplacement of rock
Dark debris flows around the rock
Debris flow coming from under subsoil
portion of rock
Eroded surface of rock (bluish colour)
Broken layers under rock surface
consistent with debris flow origin
Solid base of rock around which dark
friable looking soil adheres
Distinct difference between aerial
portion of rock and subsoil portion
which is solid and immersed in dark soil
Note:
The roughly circular concave interior of
the portion of the rock left in the soil at
the left side of the overturned piece
The layering around the wall of the rock
of the intact and the broken pieces
Layers are suggestive of a stromatolite
The texture of the layers at the base of
the raised bluish rock on the left side of
the image.
The raised crust at the base of the blue
rock seems to be made up of layers of
debris flows which were not dislodged
by the force which uplifted the rock.