New insight into lunar impact melt mobility from the LRO camera

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Abstract

The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) is systematically imaging impact melt deposits in and around lunar craters at meter and sub-meter scales. These images reveal that lunar impact melts, although morphologically similar to terrestrial lava flows of similar size, exhibit distinctive features (e.g., erosional channels). Although generated in a single rapid event, the post-impact mobility and morphology of lunar impact melts is surprisingly complex. We present evidence for multi-stage influx of impact melt into flow lobes and crater floor ponds. Our volume and cooling time estimates for the post-emplacement melt movements noted in LROC images suggest that new flows can emerge from melt ponds an extended time period after the impact event. © 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Bray, V. J., Tornabene, L. L., Keszthelyi, L. P., McEwen, A. S., Hawke, B. R., Giguere, T. A., … Van Der Bogert, C. H. (2010). New insight into lunar impact melt mobility from the LRO camera. Geophysical Research Letters, 37(21). https://doi.org/10.1029/2010GL044666

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