{ "title": "Windblown Sand in Ganges Chasma", "authors": "HiRISE", "metadata": { "thumbnailURL": "bundle://header.jpg", "excerpt": "Dark, windblown sand covers intricate sedimentary rock layers in this image from Ganges Chasma, a canyon in the Valles Marineris system." }, "version": "1.5", "identifier": "ESP_019507_1725", "language": "en", "layout": { "columns": 10, "width": 1024, "margin": 85, "gutter": 20 }, "documentStyle": { "backgroundColor": "#faf7f2" }, "components": [ { "role": "heading1", "layout": "heading1Layout", "text": "HiPOD: TUESDAY, 21 JANUARY 2020" }, { "role": "divider", "layout": "bigDividerLayout", "stroke": { "width": 3, "color": "#8c2028" } }, { "role": "title", "layout": "halfMarginBelowLayout", "text": "Windblown Sand in Ganges Chasma" }, { "role": "photo", "layout": "fullBleedLayout", "caption": "A beautiful enhanced color cutout showing details of the bedrock and sand sheets. Less than 1 km across. (NASA/JPL/UArizona)", "URL": "bundle://ESP_019507_1725-main-01-21.jpg" }, { "role": "body", "format": "html", "layout": "hipodMarginLayout", "text": "
Dark, windblown sand covers intricate sedimentary rock layers in this image from Ganges Chasma, a canyon in the Valles Marineris system.
These features are at once familiar and unusual to those familiar with Earth's beaches and deserts. Most sand dunes on Earth are made of silica-rich sand, giving them a light color; these Martian dunes owe their dark color to the iron and magnesium-rich sand found in the region.
ID: ESP_019507_1725
date: 24 September 2010
altitude: 266 km
NASA/JPL/UArizona