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Preface: the rationale for planetary analog studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2009

Mary Chapman
Affiliation:
United States Geological Survey, Arizona
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Summary

Just before I left to attend the June 2001 Geologic Society of London/Geologic Society of America Meeting in Edinburgh, Scotland, I received two e-mail messages. The first was from a UK-based freelance science writer, who was producing a proposal for a six-part television series on various ways that studies of the Earth produce clues about Mars. He requested locations where he might film, other than Hawaii. I was amazed that he seemed not to be aware of all of the locations on Earth where planetary researchers have been studying geologic processes and surfaces that they believe are analogous to those on Mars. In retrospect, his lack of knowledge is understandable, as no books were in existence on the topic of collective Earth locales for Martian studies and no planetary field guides had been published that included terrestrial analogs of the newly acquired data sets: Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Odyssey, Mars Exploration Rovers, and Mars Express. [Historically, NASA published a series of four Comparative Planetary Geology Field Guides with four locales having analog features for comparison with Mars, each book on a different subject and area (volcanic features of Hawaii, volcanism of the eastern Snake River Plain, aeolian features of southern California, and sapping features of the Colorado Plateau). However, all of these books were based on Viking data, intended for researchers in the field, were not widely distributed, and are now out of print (NASA has not published any more field guides).]

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Chapter
Information
The Geology of Mars
Evidence from Earth-Based Analogs
, pp. vii - x
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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