Mars does not currently have tectonic plate movement or volcanic activity like Earth. However, there is evidence of ancient volcanoes and past tectonic activity on Mars, as seen in features such as Olympus Mons, the largest volcano in the solar system, and Valles Marineris, a vast canyon system.
Jupiter does not have a crust like Earth because it is a gas giant. Instead of a solid surface, Jupiter is made up mostly of gases and liquids. Therefore, it does not experience typical "crustal activity" like earthquakes or volcanic eruptions.
AnswerThere is extensive evidence of past volcanic activity on Mars in the form of extinct volcanoes, the most famous of which is Olympus Mons, the highest known mountain in the Solar System. However, there is no current volcanic activity on Mars and it is apparent that Mars has undergone a cooling process, leading to all volcanic activity ceasing.There is extensive evidence of past volcanic activity on Mars in the form of extinct volcanoes, the most famous of which is Olympus Mons, the highest known mountain in the Solar System. However, there is no current volcanic activity on Mars and it is apparent that Mars has undergone a cooling process, leading to all volcanic activity ceasing. Yes there are volcanos on mars
Mars, Earth and Venus, certainly; the tallest volcano in the solar system is on Mars. And Jupiter's moon Io may be the most active body in the solar system when it comes to volcanoes; some of the eruptions go into space!
There are no animals on Mars. It is void of any life.
Mars has volcanoes and the biggest volcano in the whole solar system. There are storms too.
what is the crustal history on mars?
as it is concentrated on the crust. and the crust is moving due to crustal activity/tectonic activity.
While it is currently unknown, many scientists believe that Mars is broken into tectonic plates. However, due to extended periods of inactivity, the plates froze up, which is probably the reason why there is no volcanic activity on Mars currently. However, there was volcanic activity before due to the number of giant volcanoes such as Olympus Mons.
Because of the plate tectonic
Western
zones of crustal activity support the infrence
Yes, but little because most ofthe volcanoes are dead
There is local tectonic activity but the surface appears to be a single crustal plate, with little large-scale horizontal motion of plates as found on the Earth.
Seismic shifting is the shifting of the earth's crustal plates, causing seismic activity.
Jupiter does not have a crust like Earth because it is a gas giant. Instead of a solid surface, Jupiter is made up mostly of gases and liquids. Therefore, it does not experience typical "crustal activity" like earthquakes or volcanic eruptions.
At present there is no observed volcanic activity of Mars. The super volcano of Olympus Mon on Mars is thought to be inactive, dating its past eruption from several to 15+ million years ago.
Astronomers concluded that the crust on Mars must be thicker than Earth's crust because Mars lacks tectonic activity like Earth's plate tectonics, which recycles crustal material. This lack of recycling means that Mars's crust has likely accumulated over a longer period, resulting in a thicker crust compared to Earth's crust.