thumb|250px|left|"Ice rafts" in Conamara Chaos

thumb|300px|right|Enhanced-color regional view of Conamara Chaos, showing its location south of the intersection of two large "tripleband" [[lineae. White areas are ejecta rays from the large (26-km diameter) crater Pwyll 1000 km to the south]]

Conamara Chaos is a region of chaotic terrain on Jupiter's moon Europa. It is named after Connemara () in Ireland due to its similarly rugged landscape.

Conamara Chaos is a landscape produced by the disruption of the icy crust of Europa. The region consists of rafts of ice that have moved around and rotated. Surrounding these plates is a lower matrix of jumbled ice blocks which may have been formed as water, slush, or warm ice rose up from below the surface. The region is cited as evidence for a liquid ocean below Europa's icy surface.

Observation and naming

In 1979, Europa was visited by the two Voyager spacecrafts—Voyager 1 and Voyager 2—which returned detailed images of Europa for the first time.

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