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Mars polar layered deposits (PLD) are comprised of layers of varying dust-to-water ice volume mixing ratios (VMR) that may record astronomically-forced climatic variation over Mars recent orbital history. Retracing the formation of these layers by quantifying the sensitivity of deposition rates of polar material to astronomical forcing is critical for the interpretation of this record. Using a Mars global climate model (GCM), we investigate the sensitivity of annual polar water ice and dust surface deposition to various obliquities and surface water ice distributions at zero eccentricity, providing a reasonable characterization of the evolution of the PLD during recent low-eccentricity epochs. For obliquities between 15{deg} - 35{deg}, predicted net annual accumulation rates range from -1 to +14 mm/yr for water ice and from +0.003 to +0.3 mm/yr for dust. GCM-derived rates are ingested into an integration model that simulates polar accumulation of water ice and dust over 5 consecutive obliquity cycles (~700 kyrs) during a low eccentricity epoch. A subset of integration simulations predict combined accumulation of water ice and dust in the north at time averaged rates that are near the observationally-inferred value of 0.5 mm/yr. Three types of layers are produced per obliquity cycle: a ~30 m-thick dust-rich (~25% dust VMR) layer forms at high obliquity, a ~0.5 m-thick dust lag forms at low obliquity, and two ~10 m-thick dust-poor (~3%) layers form when obliquity is increasing/decreasing. The ~30 m-thick dust-rich layer is reminiscent of a ~30 m feature derived from visible imagery analysis the north PLD, while the ~0.5 m-thick dust lag is a factor of ~2 smaller than observed thin layers. Overall, this investigation provides further evidence for obliquity forcing in the PLD climate record, and demonstrates the importance of ice-on-dust nucleation in polar depositional processes.
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