1. A deep crust-mantle boundary in the asteroid 4 Vesta
- Author
-
Clenet, Harold, Jutzi, Martin, Barrat, Jean-Alix, Asphaug, Erik I., Benz, Willy, and Gillet, Philippe
- Subjects
Vesta (Asteroid) -- Analysis -- Natural history ,Olivine -- Properties ,Craters -- Discovery and exploration -- Natural history ,Earth -- Mantle ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
The asteroid 4 Vesta was recently found to have two large impact craters near its south pole, exposing subsurface material. Modelling suggested that surface material in the northern hemisphere of Vesta came from a depth of about 20 kilometres, whereas the exposed southern material comes from a depth of 60 to 100 kilometres. Large amounts of olivine from the mantle were not seen, suggesting that the outer 100 kilometres or so is mainly igneous crust. Here we analyse the data on Vesta and conclude that the crust-mantle boundary (or Moho) is deeper than 80 kilometres., Global mapping with high-resolution imagery by the Dawn probe revealed that the south polar depression is composed of two overlapping impact basins, Veneneia and Rheasilvia (1). This discovery is critical [...]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF