Flow deposits on Mercury – Impact ejecta flows or landslides?

Post contributed by Alistair Blance, The Open University, UK

During an impact on Mercury’s surface, material is ejected from the forming impact crater. As Mercury has only a tenuous atmosphere, ejected material travels predominantly ballistically, creating an ejecta deposit around the crater that thins gradually with increasing distance. However, large deposits emplaced by ground-hugging flows can be found around some impact craters on Mercury (Image 1). Evidence for flow includes material being diverted around obstacles, a steep edge or distal ridge at deposit margins, and a lobate shape to several examples. Some flow deposits extend outwards around a whole crater, but often they are confined within topographic lows adjacent to the crater. To help assess the origin of these features, it is useful to compare them to similar features across the Solar System. This comparison may also indicate how differences between the planets can influence the development of flows around craters.

Image 1: Flow deposits around craters on Mercury. Deposit boundaries indicated with red triangles. (A) Flow deposit extending from the central crater into an underlying crater in the top right of the image. Steep margins with a lobate shape suggest emplacement by flow. Image taken from MESSENGER MDIS BDR Global Basemap. (B) A crater with two sections of flow deposit extending into the underlying crater in the bottom right of the image. Image taken from MESSENGER MDIS frame EW0260906588G. (C) Sketch map of the image in B. Shows the two sections of flow deposit in red, with hypothesised direction of emplacement shown with red arrows. The deposit appears to have been diverted around a central peak within the underlying crater, providing evidence for emplacement via ground-hugging flow.

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Volatile-rich impact ejecta on Mercury

Post contributed by Dr Jack Wright, School of Physical Sciences, The Open University, UK.

The Caloris basin is the largest (~1,500 km across), well-preserved impact structure on Mercury (Image 1a; Fassett et al., 2009). Hummocky plains around Caloris host numerous, steep-looking, conical knobs (Image 1b). The obvious explanation for the hummocky plains is that they formed from material ejected by the Caloris impact ~3.8 billion years ago. It follows that the knobs probably formed from discrete ejecta blocks. What isn’t obvious is why many of these blocks, which hypothetically could have formed with a variety of shapes, exist as steep cones in the present day. If these knobs really did form as Caloris ejecta, then they offer a rare opportunity to study materials ejected from Mercury’s interior with remote sensing techniques.

Image 1: Mercury and the circum-Caloris knobs. (a) Enhanced colour limb view of Mercury from the MESSENGER spacecraft. The Caloris basin’s interior is made of volcanic plains that appear orange in this data product. The arrow indicates the location of (b). (b) Examples of circum-Caloris knobs just outside the Caloris rim. Mosaic of MESSENGER MDIS WAC frames EW0220807059G, EW0220807071G, and EW0220763870G. ~86 m/pixel.

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