June 18, 2013

From LPOD
Revision as of 18:14, 7 February 2015 by Api (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

Its a Fake!

LPOD-Jun18-13.jpg
LRO images from Moon-WIki (John Moore) and NAC (NASA/ASU)

Maurice Collins recently pointed out to me a spectacular apparent oblique impact crater inside Daguerre on the north shore of Mare Nectaris. It turns out that
this small crater has been noticed for a long time. It was beautifully seen on an Apollo 16 image back in the early 1970s, where it was interpreted as an
oblique impact. I repeated that assessment in 2009 using a wonderful Kuguya image. In 2010, a LRO-NAC image led lunar scientist Irene Antonenko to a new
interpetation: the dark zone of avoidance is actually covered with dark ejecta rather than bright - it isn't an oblique impact crater at all. The LRO image shows
that dark material crops out just below the crater rim crest. It could be pyroclastic material from the volcanic vents along Daguerre's north rim. Or it could be
pulverized mare lava. Because it is not the topmost layer on the little crater it probably is not impact melt from the small crater's formation. In any case it may
have a limited occurrence under the crater, explaining why the dark ejecta is localized to the southern quarter of the ejecta field. Actually there are some
outcrops of dark material to the right of the dark ejecta but that seems less continuous than the rim exposure that caused the ejecta and the cascading dark
material toward the crater floor. If you explore the dark ejecta on the NAC image you will see that the dark material mantles pre-existing craters, softening
their morphology and being draped over everything. Irene points out that my old friend Farouk El Baz speculated back in Apollo days that the darkness could
be due to an abrupt lateral change in the composition of the bedrock within the area that was excavated. As usual, Farouk was right, as was Irene, and also
James Ashley who wrote in 2012 an LRO Featured Image article on this fake oblique impact crater. Makes you wonder how many other presumed obliques
might be target inhomogeneities.

Chuck Wood

Related Links
Rükl plate 47
21st Century Atlas chart 6.

Yesterday's LPOD: A Proto-Patrick Moore

Tomorrow's LPOD: Still Fighting Old Wars



COMMENTS?

Register, Log in, and join in the comments.