Degradation of Victoria crater, Mars
نویسندگان
چکیده
[1] The 750 m diameter and 75 m deep Victoria crater in Meridiani Planum, Mars, is a degraded primary impact structure retaining a 5 m raised rim consisting of 1–2 m of uplifted rocks overlain by 3 m of ejecta at the rim crest. The rim is 120–220 m wide and is surrounded by a dark annulus reaching an average of 590 m beyond the raised rim. Comparison between observed morphology and that expected for pristine craters 500–750 m across indicates that the original, pristine crater was close to 600 m in diameter. Hence, the crater has been erosionally widened by 150 m and infilled by 50 m of sediments. Eolian processes are responsible for most crater modification, but lesser mass wasting or gully activity contributions cannot be ruled out. Erosion by prevailing winds is most significant along the exposed rim and upper walls and accounts for 50 m widening across a WNW–ESE diameter. The volume of material eroded from the crater walls and rim is 20% less than the volume of sediments partially filling the crater, indicating eolian infilling from sources outside the crater over time. The annulus formed when 1 m deflation of the ejecta created a lag of more resistant hematite spherules that trapped <10–20 cm of darker, regional basaltic sands. Greater relief along the rim enabled meters of erosion. Comparison between Victoria and regional craters leads to definition of a crater degradation sequence dominated by eolian erosion and infilling over time.
منابع مشابه
A Case Study in Extracting DEMs from High-Resolution Mars Stereo Pairs Using a Simple Computer Vision Algorithm
Background: Geoscientists have been doing research on Mars for decades. As the photography technique has improved, we now have thousands of high-resolution stereo pair images but it is difficult to extract quantitative information including relative heights and slopes without the aid of computer vision. Our goal is to create an easy-to-use, accurate and high performance tool which can process a...
متن کاملExploration of Victoria crater by the Mars rover Opportunity.
The Mars rover Opportunity has explored Victoria crater, an approximately 750-meter eroded impact crater formed in sulfate-rich sedimentary rocks. Impact-related stratigraphy is preserved in the crater walls, and meteoritic debris is present near the crater rim. The size of hematite-rich concretions decreases up-section, documenting variation in the intensity of groundwater processes. Layering ...
متن کاملDegradation of Selected Terrestrial and Martian Impact Craters
Degraded craters on Mars record the cumulative ffects of the complex interplay between erosion, transport and deposition by competing intermittent processes. Fommately, impact craters are instantaneous landforms common to both the Earth and Mars that are characterized by similar topography and local lithofacies. Deconvolving the signatures of individual degradation processes around young crater...
متن کاملLandform Degradation on Mercury, the Moon, and Mars: Evidence From Crater Depth/Diam~ter Relationships
Morphologic classification of craters and quantitative measurements of crater depth as a function of diameter are used to investigate the relative degradational histories of Mercury, the moon, and Mars. Martian craters exhibit considerable depth variation and are generally shallower than their lunar or mercurian counterparts. On Mercury and the moon, visually fresh and degraded craters on smoot...
متن کاملA reassessment of impact crater degradation by climatic processes on Early Mars
Crater degradation on Mars is a key to understand erosion through time. Strongly eroded craters in the highlands are interpreted to be the result of enhanced erosion rate during the Noachian epoch [1]. While fluvial valleys climatic meaning and duration are still difficult to define (strongly warmer climate or episodic activity under slightly warmer climate), the enhanced Noachian craters degra...
متن کامل