The Effect of Antecedent Topography on Complex Crater Formation

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...

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发表在:Geophysical Research Letters
Main Authors: Don R. Hood, Brennan W. Young, Aviv L. Cohen‐Zada, Peter B. James, Ryan C. Ewing, Jeffery S. Lee
格式: 文件
语言:英语
出版: Wiley 2024-07-01
主题:
在线阅读:https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL108608
实物特征
总结: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.
ISSN:0094-8276
1944-8007