4.5 Article

Topographic Degradation Processes of Lunar Crater Walls Inferred From Boulder Falls

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 127, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021JE007176

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Nagoya University Interdisciplinary Frontier Fellowship - Japan Science and Technology Agency
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI [20H00194]
  3. Nagoya University

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Recent studies have found that boulder falls on the lunar surface are likely triggered by meteorite impacts rather than moonquakes. A proposed model suggests that boulders and regolith may be generated and transported on slopes by meteorite impacts, which could be directly related to the degradation of crater slopes on the Moon.
Recent explorations by lunar orbiters have shown that boulder falls are distributed over the entire lunar surface. To quantitatively evaluate the effects of moonquakes and meteorite impacts on boulder falls, we performed detailed surveys at two sites: One in the southern part of the Schrodinger basin (Site 1) and the other in Laue crater (Site 2). Using images and topography data from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and KAGUYA, we measured the detailed distributions of boulder falls, small craters, slope angles, and the optical maturity parameter (OMAT) and modeled maximum ground acceleration due to impacts at these sites. In steeply sloping areas at both sites, we found that the density of small craters was low and areas with high OMAT values corresponded to boulder sources, where many boulders exist. At Site 1, the starting points of boulder falls and ground acceleration due to impacts were correlated. In addition, craters with boulder falls at and around Site 2 were distributed independently of the presumable epicentral distance from a shallow moonquake that occurred in 1975 near Site 2, which was previously inferred to have triggered boulder falls at the site. Our results suggest that boulder falls at these sites were triggered not by moonquakes but by meteorite impacts. We propose a model for the generation and transport of boulders and regolith on slopes by meteorite impacts, which may be directly related to the degradation of crater slopes on the Moon.

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