{"title":"Tectonism of Mercury","authors":"P. Byrne","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190647926.013.128","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Mercury, like its inner Solar System planetary neighbors Venus, Mars, and the Moon, shows no evidence of having ever undergone plate tectonics. Nonetheless, the innermost planet boasts a long record of tectonic deformation. The most prominent manifestation of this history is a population of large scarps that occurs throughout the planet’s cratered terrains; some of these scarps rise kilometers above the surrounding landscape. Mercury’s smooth plains, the majority of which are volcanic and occupy over a quarter of the planet, abound with low-relief ridges. The scarps and ridges are underlain by thrust faults and point to a tectonic history dominated by crustal shortening. At least some of the shortening strain recorded by the ridges may reflect subsidence of the lavas in which they formed, but the widespread distribution of scarps attests to a planetwide process of global contraction, wherein Mercury experienced a reduction in volume as its interior cooled through time.\n The onset of this phenomenon placed the lithosphere into a net state of horizontal compression, and accounts for why Mercury hosts only a few instances of extensional structures. These landforms, shallow troughs that form complex networks, occur almost wholly in volcanically flooded impact craters and basins and developed as those lavas cooled and thermally contracted. Tellingly, widespread volcanism on Mercury ended at around the same time the population of scarps began to form. Explosive volcanism endured beyond this point, but almost exclusively at sites of lithospheric weakness, where large faults penetrate deep into the interior. These observations are consistent with decades-old predictions that global contraction would shut off major volcanic activity, and illustrate how closely Mercury’s tectonic and volcanic histories are intertwined.\n The tectonic character of Mercury is thus one of sustained crustal shortening with only localized extension, which started almost four billion years ago and extends into the geologically recent past. This character somewhat resembles that of the Moon, but differs substantially from those of Earth, Venus, or Mars. Mercury may represent how small rocky planets tectonically evolve and could provide a basis for understanding the geological properties of similarly small worlds in orbit around other stars.","PeriodicalId":304611,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Planetary Science","volume":"27 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-06-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Planetary Science","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190647926.013.128","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3

Abstract

Mercury, like its inner Solar System planetary neighbors Venus, Mars, and the Moon, shows no evidence of having ever undergone plate tectonics. Nonetheless, the innermost planet boasts a long record of tectonic deformation. The most prominent manifestation of this history is a population of large scarps that occurs throughout the planet’s cratered terrains; some of these scarps rise kilometers above the surrounding landscape. Mercury’s smooth plains, the majority of which are volcanic and occupy over a quarter of the planet, abound with low-relief ridges. The scarps and ridges are underlain by thrust faults and point to a tectonic history dominated by crustal shortening. At least some of the shortening strain recorded by the ridges may reflect subsidence of the lavas in which they formed, but the widespread distribution of scarps attests to a planetwide process of global contraction, wherein Mercury experienced a reduction in volume as its interior cooled through time. The onset of this phenomenon placed the lithosphere into a net state of horizontal compression, and accounts for why Mercury hosts only a few instances of extensional structures. These landforms, shallow troughs that form complex networks, occur almost wholly in volcanically flooded impact craters and basins and developed as those lavas cooled and thermally contracted. Tellingly, widespread volcanism on Mercury ended at around the same time the population of scarps began to form. Explosive volcanism endured beyond this point, but almost exclusively at sites of lithospheric weakness, where large faults penetrate deep into the interior. These observations are consistent with decades-old predictions that global contraction would shut off major volcanic activity, and illustrate how closely Mercury’s tectonic and volcanic histories are intertwined. The tectonic character of Mercury is thus one of sustained crustal shortening with only localized extension, which started almost four billion years ago and extends into the geologically recent past. This character somewhat resembles that of the Moon, but differs substantially from those of Earth, Venus, or Mars. Mercury may represent how small rocky planets tectonically evolve and could provide a basis for understanding the geological properties of similarly small worlds in orbit around other stars.
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水星的构造论
水星,像它在太阳系内的邻居金星、火星和月球一样,没有证据表明它曾经经历过板块构造。尽管如此,这颗最里面的行星有着悠久的构造变形记录。这段历史最突出的表现是遍布地球陨石坑地形的大量大陡坡;其中一些陡坡高出周围景观数公里。水星平坦的平原,大部分是火山,占据了地球的四分之一以上,到处都是低起伏的山脊。陡坡和山脊下覆逆冲断层,显示出以地壳缩短为主的构造史。至少,脊上记录的一些缩短的应变可能反映了形成它们的熔岩的下沉,但陡坡的广泛分布证明了全球范围内的收缩过程,其中水星的体积随着时间的推移而冷却。这种现象的开始使岩石圈处于水平压缩的净状态,这也解释了为什么水星上只有少数伸展构造的实例。这些地形,形成复杂网络的浅槽,几乎全部发生在火山淹没的撞击坑和盆地中,并随着那些熔岩的冷却和热收缩而发展。引人注目的是,水星上广泛的火山活动大约在陡坡开始形成的同时结束。在此之后,爆炸性火山活动持续存在,但几乎只发生在岩石圈薄弱的地方,在那里,巨大的断层深入到内部。这些观测结果与几十年前的预测一致,即全球收缩将关闭主要的火山活动,并说明水星的构造和火山历史是如何紧密地交织在一起的。因此,水星的构造特征是持续的地壳缩短,只有局部的伸展,这种缩短始于近40亿年前,一直延伸到最近的地质时期。这一特征在某种程度上类似于月球,但与地球、金星或火星的特征有本质上的不同。水星可能代表了小型岩石行星是如何构造演化的,并可能为理解其他恒星轨道上类似小型行星的地质特性提供基础。
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