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The Effect of Antecedent Topography on Complex Crater Formation.

Authors :
Hood, Don R.
Young, Brennan W.
Cohen‐Zada, Aviv L.
James, Peter B.
Ewing, Ryan C.
Lee, Jeffery S.
Source :
Geophysical Research Letters. 7/28/2024, Vol. 51 Issue 14, p1-9. 9p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Impact craters that form on every planetary body provide a record of planetary surface evolution. On heavily cratered surfaces, new craters that form often overlap antecedent craters, but it is unknown how the presence of antecedent craters alters impact crater formation. We use overlapping complex crater pairs on the lunar surface to constrain this process and find that crater rims are systematically lower where they intersect antecedent crater basins. The rim morphology of the new crater depends on the depth of the antecedent crater and the degree of overlap between the craters. Our observations suggest that new craters do not always obliterate underlying topography and that transient rim collapse is altered by antecedent topography. This study represents the first formalization of the influence of antecedent topography on rim morphology and provides process insight into a common impact scenario relevant to the geology of potential Artemis landing sites. Plain Language Summary: Craters form on the surface of many planetary bodies and help us to understand many qualities of the surface including, critically, the age of the surface. On older surfaces with many craters, new craters that form often overlap and partially destroy older craters, though we don't know if or how the presence of the older crater changes the processes that create the new crater. Looking at large Lunar craters, we can determine that the presence of an older crater causes the rim of the new crater to be asymmetric: lower where it forms within the older crater basin. The difference in height between the new crater rim inside and outside the old crater depends on both the depth of the older crater, and where the new crater forms relative to the older crater. From this we can interpret that the presence of the older crater alters the way the new crater forms, leading to an uneven collapse of early rim materials. Key Points: Overlapping complex crater rims are lower inside the antecedent basins compared to outsideDeeper antecedent basins and more significant crater overlap tend to create larger differences in rim heightChanges in the impact crater formation process, mainly during transient rim collapse, influence the shape of overlapping crater rims [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00948276
Volume :
51
Issue :
14
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Geophysical Research Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178683302
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL108608