5/31/2023 0 Comments Tessera publishing![]() Tessera boundaries include Type I (sinuous/embayed, dominated by adjacent lava plains embaying tessera massifs 73% of total tesserae boundaries) and Type II (linear/tectonic). Although tessera exhibit a range of gravity signatures, many occurrences are interpreted to represent relatively shallow (crustal) levels of compensation. In terms of number of occurrences, however, tesserae do not display a correlation with elevation at the global scale, since small tessera patches commonly occupy low-lying regions. Tessera terrain has a bimodal elevation-frequency distribution, with the main peak at about 0–1 km and an additional peak at about 3 km above mean planetary radius. Modes of occurrence include (1) large clusters (e.g., Aphrodite Terra and Ishtar Terra) (2) arc-like segments which may extend for thousands of kilometers and are either concave inward toward the major tessera cluster development or away from it (3) areas where tesserae are rare or absent which occur both as low-lying plains (e.g., Guinevere Planitia), and as elevated regions (e.g., Atla Regio). ![]() ![]() The size-frequency distribution of tessera patches is strongly unimodal and skewed toward smaller sizes, reflecting the great abundance of small tessera fragments. Individual tessera occurrences range in area from the lower limits of our measurements (about 200 km 2) up to the largest tessera, Ovda, with an area of about 8.6 × 10 6 km 2, or about 2% of the surface area of Venus. The tessera terrain on Venus, comprised of areas of high radar backscatter, complex deformation patterns relative to other units, and topography standing higher than surrounding plains, covers ∼35.33 × 10 6 km 2, about 8% of the surface of Venus, and is nonrandomly distributed, being preferentially located at equatorial and higher northern latitudes with a distinct paucity below about 30°S.
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