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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2019-08-15
    Description: That even relatively small impacts can spread material across the face of the Moon is evident from the rays of Tycho. Tycho ejecta triggered the landslide that produced the light mantle deposit at Apollo 17 and perhaps excavated the Central Valley craters there. Basin-sized impacts appear to follow the same scaling laws as smaller impacts, as indicated by the satisfaction of a geophysical model. These giant impacts rearranged huge amounts of premare material, complicating the determination of provenance of materials collected from the highlands. We have developed a model to estimate the probability that material at a particular location might derive from a given basin or large crater. This model is based on crater scaling laws, and effects of secondary cratering. Because it accounts for the volume of primary ejecta from the basin-forming transient craters and the excavating and mixing effects of these ejecta with the substrate onto which they fall, it gives much thicker deposits than an early work. Our modeling takes into account the distribution of sizes of primary ejecta fragments (PriFrags) to obtain the probability at a given site for a deposit of a particular thickness and with a fraction of PriFrags.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Exploration
    Type: Workshop on New Views of the Moon: Integrated Remotely Sensed, Geophysical, and Sample Datasets; 35-36; LPI-Contrib-958
    Format: text
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: In the course of examining rocks along the traverse of the Spirit rover toward the Columbia Hills [1, 9], we noticed that the chemistry of a rock named "Wooly Patch" was neither basaltic as the rocks near the landing site [8] nor slightly altered basalt inferred from regolith in plains trenches [10]. The major cation ratios appear to match those of phyllosilicates [11]. The presence of phyllosilicate minerals on Mars has been predicted [12]; reasons for the rarity or absence of phyllosilicates have also been discussed [13]. We have thus done as detailed an analysis of Wooly Patch as the data enable, which suggests phyllosilicates of kaolinite, serpentine, and chlorite types, plus some feldspar and pyroxene are prime candidates to constitute Wooly Patch.
    Keywords: Geophysics
    Type: Lunar and Planetary Science XXXVI, Part 21; LPI-Contrib-1234-Pt-21
    Format: application/pdf
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