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A geomorphic analysis of Hale crater, Mars: The effects of impact into ice-rich crust

Authors :
H. J. Melosh
Livio L. Tornabene
Victor R. Baker
Daniel C. Berman
A. P. Jones
Alfred S. McEwen
Source :
Icarus. 211:259-272
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2011.

Abstract

Hale crater, a 125 × 150 km impact crater located near the intersection of Uzboi Vallis and the northern rim of Argyre basin at 35.7°S, 323.6°E, is surrounded by channels that radiate from, incise, and transport material within Hale’s ejecta. The spatial and temporal relationship between the channels and Hale’s ejecta strongly suggests the impact event created or modified the channels and emplaced fluidized debris flow lobes over an extensive area (>200,000 km2). We estimate ∼1010 m3 of liquid water was required to form some of Hale’s smaller channels, a volume we propose was supplied by subsurface ice melted and mobilized by the Hale-forming impact. If 10% of the subsurface volume was ice, based on a conservative porosity estimate for the upper martian crust, 1012 m3 of liquid water could have been present in the ejecta. We determine a crater-retention age of 1 Ga inside the primary cavity, providing a minimum age for Hale and a time at which we propose the subsurface was volatile-rich. Hale crater demonstrates the important role impacts may play in supplying liquid water to the martian surface: they are capable of producing fluvially-modified terrains that may be analogous to some landforms of Noachian Mars.

Details

ISSN :
00191035
Volume :
211
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Icarus
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........03e1ce203444240add3b2acc47675a1e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2010.10.014