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Tharsis bulge : ウィキペディア英語版
Tharsis

Tharsis is a vast volcanic plateau centered near the equator in the western hemisphere of Mars. The region is home to the largest volcanoes in the Solar System, including the three enormous shield volcanoes Arsia Mons, Pavonis Mons, and Ascraeus Mons, which are collectively known as the Tharsis Montes. The tallest volcano on the planet, Olympus Mons, is often associated with the Tharsis region but is actually located off the western edge of the plateau. The name Tharsis is the Greco-Latin transliteration of the biblical Tarshish, the land at western extremity of the known world.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Welcome to the Planets Version 1.5 )
==Location and Size==

Tharsis can have many meanings depending on historical and scientific context. The name is commonly used in a broad sense to represent a continent-sized region of anomalously elevated terrain centered just south of the equator around longitude 265°E.〔Carr, M.H. (2006). ''The Surface of Mars;'' Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK, p. 46. ISBN 978-0-521-87201-0.〕 Called the Tharsis bulge or Tharsis rise, this broad, elevated region dominates the western hemisphere of Mars and is the largest topographic feature on the planet, after the global dichotomy.〔Boyce, J.M. (2008). ''The Smithsonian Book of Mars; ''Konecky & Konecky: Old Saybrook, CT, p. 101. ISBN 1-56852-714-4.〕
Tharsis has no formally defined boundaries,〔Morton, O. (2002). ''Mapping Mars: Science, Imagination, and the Birth of a World;'' Picador: New York, p. 98, ISBN 0-312-42261-X.〕 so precise dimensions for the region are difficult to give. In general, the bulge is about 5,000 km across〔 and up to 7 km high〔 (excluding the volcanoes, which have much higher elevations). It roughly extends from Amazonis Planitia (215°E) in the west to Chryse Planitia (300°E) in the east. The bulge is slightly elongated in the north-south direction, running from the northern flanks of Alba Mons (about 55°N) to the southern base of the Thaumasia highlands (about 43°S). Depending on how the region is defined, Tharsis covers 10–30 million km2, or up to 25% of Mars’ surface area.〔Tanaka, K.L.; Scott, D.H.; Greeley, R. (1992). Global Stratigraphy in ''Mars,'' H.H. Kieffer et al., Eds; University of Arizona Press: Tucson, AZ, p. 369. ISBN 0-8165-1257-4.〕〔Williams, J.-P.; Nimmo, F.; Moore, W. B.; Paige, D. A. (2008). The Formation of Tharsis on Mars: What the Line-of-Sight Gravity Is Telling Us. ''J. Geophys. Res.,'' 113(E10011), .〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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