The Martian impact cratering recordA detailed analysis of the Martian impact cratering record is presented. The major differences in impact crater morphology and morphometry between Mars and the moon and Mercury are argued to be largely the result of subsurface volatiles on Mars. In general, the depth to these volatiles may decrease with increasing latitude in the southern hemisphere, but the base of this layer may be at a more or less constant depth. The Martial crustal dichotomy could have been the result of a very large impact near the end of the accretion of Mars. Monte Carlo computer simulations suggest that such an impact was not only possible, but likely. The Martian highland cratering record shows a marked paucity of craters less than about 30 km in diameter relative to the lunar highlands. This paucity of craters was probably the result of the obliteration of craters by an early period of intense erosion and deposition by aeolian, fluvial, and glacial processes.
Document ID
19930043867
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Strom, Robert G. (NASA Headquarters Washington, DC United States)
Croft, Steven K. (Arizona Univ. Tucson, United States)
Barlow, Nadine G. (Lunar and Planetary Inst. Houston, TX, United States)