Blocks litter the interior floor of an impact crater in the north farside highlands terrain. LROC Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) frame M187357438LR, LRO orbit 12679, March 25, 2012; angle of incidence 52.19° - resolution 1.76 meters per pixel, field of view 1.81 kilometers from 180.37 km [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University]. |
Lillian Ostrach
LROC News System
Blocks littering the floors of impact craters are evidence that erosive processes continue to act on the Moon. Blocks are distributed along the boundary between the crater walls and the floor of von Bekesy F (52.8°N, 137.04°E, 20 km diameter) and also surrounding mounds located on the crater floor.
LROC News System
Blocks littering the floors of impact craters are evidence that erosive processes continue to act on the Moon. Blocks are distributed along the boundary between the crater walls and the floor of von Bekesy F (52.8°N, 137.04°E, 20 km diameter) and also surrounding mounds located on the crater floor.
Today's Featured Image highlights boulders approximately 1 meter across eroding out of a floor mound and boulders that fell from somewhere along the crater wall or rim (52.86°N, 137.094°E). Observations of geologic relations between features are integral to developing a geologic story for an area, so it is important to make careful study of the different features. If we were to tell a story about the different boulders observed in the opening image, where should we start?
There are clusters of blocky, fragmented material located on and surrounding the mound in the lower left of the opening image, and the boulders range from around 10 to 15 meters across. Observations of partially covered blocks on the mound support a mound origin.
Interior view of von Bekesey F from 180 km, cropped from the full LROC NAC mosaic image [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University]. |
Similarly, the distribution of roughly 10 meters wide boulders at the contact between crater wall and floor suggests that these boulders probably fell from higher up on the crater wall. But what about the boulders in between the mound and the floor-wall contact? At least one boulder is located at the terminus of a trail that can be traced back to the crater wall, but there are no other apparent relationships linking boulder to their origin.
LROC WAC monochrome mosaic centered on von Bekesy F crater, and asterisk notes location of opening image [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University]. |
What do you think? Can you find evidence for boulder origin elsewhere in von Bekesy F in the full LROC NAC image, HERE?
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