Figure: New Dune Gullies (detail)

This picture is a mosaic of two Mars Odyssey Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) Visible (VIS) images; north is approximately up and sunlight illuminates the scene from the upper left. The dark-toned sand dune field is on the floor of a crater located near 49.8 oS, 325.4 oW.

One of the many mysteries associated with martian geology is the origin of gullies found at latitudes poleward of 30o. Most of these gullies are found within craters or other depressions, and appear to be related to the bedrock. Several alternative hypotheses have been proposed for their origin, including groundwater seepage and melting at the base of a dust-mantled snowpack.

Some middle-latitude gullies are found on sand dunes. These gullies appear to be different from those found on the slopes of craters, but generally have been interpreted to form by similar processes. In the present martian environment, it is difficult to introduce water to the surface. The temperature and atmospheric pressure may permit water to exist, but the rate of heating of the ground and atmosphere, and the amount of energy available to warm the ground or melt snow, is not conducive to such processes.

As part of the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) Extended Mission science investigation, the MOC team has an on-going effort to re-image locations known from previous observations to have gullies. The intent is to see if gully-forming processes are operating on Mars at the present time.

What would happen to CO2 (carbon dioxide) frost incorporated into a martian sand dune? On surfaces that receive early and direct sunlight, the sand would heat and the CO2 frost would sublime over a period of time, undermining the slope and promoting normal sand sliding. On slopes that were initially shaded and later exposed to direct sunlight, heating would be delayed and the CO2 frost would sublime rapidly. This rapid formation of CO2 gas may act to fluidize overlying sand, causing it to flow rather than avalanche, and thus create a gully.

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Credit: NASA/JPL/Malin Space Science Systems

http://www.msss.com/mars_images/moc/2005/09/20/dunegullies/index.html