4.5 Article

Thickness of Lunar Mare Basalts: New Results Based on Modeling the Degradation of Partially Buried Craters

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 124, Issue 9, Pages 2430-2459

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2018JE005872

Keywords

mare basalt thickness; crater degradation; fresh crater morphometry

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11573005, 41941002]
  2. CAS Key Laboratory of Lunar and Deep Space Exploration Grant [LDSE201704]
  3. Science and Technology Development Fund of Macau [043/2016/A2]
  4. French Space Agency (CNES)
  5. China Scholarship Council [201606010077]

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Partially buried craters on the Moon are those craters whose distal ejecta are covered by lava flows and where the crater rim crest still protrudes above the mare plain. Based on the difference in rim heights between a partially buried crater and an unburied crater, previous studies estimated the thicknesses of the lunar mare basalts. However, these studies did not consider the erosion of the crater rim height, which can result in an overestimate in the derived thickness. By using recent high-resolution topographic data, we report a basalt thickness estimation method based on numerically modeling the topographic degradation of partially buried craters. We identified 661 buried craters over the lunar surface, and their spatial distribution suggests a preferential occurrence along the mare-highland boundaries. An elevation model of fresh lunar craters was derived, and the topographic diffusion equation was used to model crater degradation. By modeling the formation, degradation, and flooding of partially buried craters, basalt thicknesses were estimated for 41 mare craters whose rims are completely exposed. The resulting mare basalt thicknesses vary from 33 to 455 m, with a median value of 105 m that is 95 m smaller than that derived when not considering crater degradation. The estimated eruption rate of lunar mare basalts is found to have peaked at 3.4 Ga and then decreased with time, indicating a progressive cooling of the lunar interior. As a by-product from the crater degradation model, our results suggest that the topographic diffusivity of lunar craters increases with diameter.

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