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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 99, NO. E11,
PAGES 23,163–23,171,
1994
Recent deformation rates on Venus
Robert E. Grimm
Department of Geology, Arizona State University, Tempe
Abstract
Constraints on the recent geological evolution of Venus may be provided by quantitative estimates of the rates of the principal
resurfacing processes, volcanism and tectonism. This paper focuses on the latter, using impact craters as strain indicators.
The total postimpact tectonic strain lies in the range 0.5–6.5%, which defines a recent mean strain rate of 10−18–10−17 s−1 when divided by the mean surface age. Interpretation of the cratering record as one of pure production requires a decline
in resurfacing rates at about 500 Ma (catastrophic resurfacing model). If distributed tectonic resurfacing contributed strongly
before that time, as suggested by the widespread occurrence of tessera as inliers, the mean global strain rate must have been
at least ∼10−155 S−1, which is also typical of terrestrial active margins. Numerical calculations of the response of the lithosphere to inferred
mantle convective forces were performed to test the hypothesis that a decrease in surface strain rate by at least two orders
of magnitude could be caused by a steady decline in heat flow over the last billion years. Parameterized convection models
predict that the mean global thermal gradient decreases by only about 5 K/km over this time; even with the exponential dependence
of viscosity upon temperature, the surface strain rate drops by little more than one order of magnitude. Strongly unsteady
cooling and very low thermal gradients today are necessary to satisfy the catastrophic model. An alternative, uniformitarian
resurfacing hypothesis holds that Venus is resurfaced in quasi-random “patches” several hundred kilometers in size that occur
in response to changing mantle convection patterns. Under such a model, the observed crater strain distribution indicates
that about 1 % of the planet's surface is tectonically active at any time. However, this model requires a very weak crustal
rheology to achieve surface velocities ∼100 mm/yr appropriate to the required “patch” size. Without well-developed lateral
weak zones, Venus is essentially a one-plate planet, but one in which the lithosphere is able to respond to topography produced
by mantle convection through faulting and limited horizontal movement. The net rate of tectonic activity is logarithmically
intermediate between Earth and Mars: about 100 times slower than plate tectonics, but up to 100 times faster than planets
where tectonic stress arises largely from lithospheric cooling and contraction.
Received 11
February
1994;
accepted 25
August
1994.
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Citation: Grimm, R. E.
(1994),
Recent deformation rates on Venus,
J. Geophys. Res.,
99(E11),
23,163–23,171.
Copyright 1994 by the American Geophysical Union.
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