Geomorphologic Mapping of Titan's Polar Terrains: Constraining Surface Processes and Landscape Evolution
Samuel Birch, Alexander Hayes, William Dietrich, Alan Howard, Charlie, Bristow, Michael Malaska, Jeff Moore, Marco Mastrogiuseppe, Jason Hofgartner,, David Williams, Oliver White, Jason Soderblom, Jason Barnes, Elizabeth, Turtle, Jonathan Lunine, Charles Wood, Catherine Neish

TL;DR
This study creates a detailed geomorphologic map of Titan's polar terrains using Cassini data, revealing process interactions and landscape evolution, and suggesting past large polar oceans influenced sedimentary deposits and landforms.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive geomorphologic map of Titan's polar regions, integrating multiple datasets to infer surface processes and landscape history.
Findings
Polar terrains share similar formation processes.
Sedimentary plains are over 600m thick in places.
Evidence suggests past large polar oceans influenced landscape formation.
Abstract
We present a geomorphologic map of Titan's polar terrains. The map was generated from a combination of Cassini Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) and Imaging Science Subsystem imaging products, as well as altimetry, SARTopo and radargrammetry topographic datasets. In combining imagery with topographic data, our geomorphologic map reveals a stratigraphic sequence from which we infer process interactions between units. In mapping both polar regions with the same geomorphologic units, we conclude that processes that formed the terrains of the north polar region also acted to form the landscape we observe at the south. Uniform, SAR-dark plains are interpreted as sedimentary deposits, and are bounded by moderately dissected uplands. These plains contain the highest density of filled and empty lake depressions, and canyons. These units unconformably overlay a basement rock that outcrops as…
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