Stratigraphy of Aeolis Dorsa, Mars: stratigraphic context of the great river deposits
Edwin S. Kite, Alan D. Howard, Antoine S. Lucas, John C. Armstrong,, Oded Aharonson, and Michael P. Lamb

TL;DR
This study establishes the stratigraphic sequence of river and related deposits in Aeolis Dorsa, Mars, revealing multiple episodes of surface runoff, unconformities, and climate variations over millions of years, linked to Mars' obliquity cycles.
Contribution
It provides a detailed stratigraphic framework and chronological constraints for Martian river deposits, connecting them to climate cycles and orbital variations, which is a novel integration of stratigraphy and climate modeling.
Findings
Identified at least three distinct episodes of surface runoff.
Constrained the timing of deposits to over 100 million years.
Linked stratigraphic unconformities to Mars' obliquity cycles.
Abstract
Unraveling the stratigraphic record is the key to understanding ancient climate and past climate changes on Mars. River deposits when placed in stratigraphic order could constrain the number, magnitudes, and durations of the wettest climates in Mars history. We establish the stratigraphic context of river deposits in Aeolis Dorsa sedimentary basin, 10E of Gale crater. Here, wind has exhumed a stratigraphic section of >=4 unconformity-bounded sedimentary rock packages, recording >=3 distinct episodes of surface runoff. Early deposits (>700m thick) are embayed by river deposits (>400m), which are in turn unconformably draped by fan-shaped deposits (<100m) which we interpret as alluvial fans. Yardang-forming deposits (>900 m) unconformably drape all previous deposits. River deposits embay a dissected sedimentary-rock landscape, and comprise >=2 distinguishable units. The total interval…
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