Pandora Fretum Crater

Scaled Image

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU

About this image

Another in a series of craters with unusual interior deposits, this THEMIS image shows an unnamed crater in the southern hemisphere Pandora Fretum region near the Hellas Basin. Craters with eroded layered deposits are quite common on Mars but the crusty textured domes in the center of the image make this crater more unusual. Looking vaguely like granitic intrusions, the erosional style is distinct from the rest of the interior deposit which shows a very obvious layered morphology. While it is unlikely that the domes are granite plutons, it is possible that they do represent some other shallowly emplaced magmatic intrusion. More likely still is that variations in induration of the layered deposit allow for variations in the erosional morphology. Note how the surface of the crater floor in the northernmost portion of the image has a texture similar to that of the domes. This may represent an incipient form of the erosion that has produced the domes but has not progressed as far. An analysis of other craters in the area may shed light on the origin of the domes. Small sand dunes are present on the crater floor and several small channels disect the crater rim.

Please see the THEMIS Data Citation Note for details on crediting THEMIS images. 

Context

Image ID: 
V02296003 (View data in Mars Image Explorer)
-34.5952
43.1998
2296
2002-06-21 06:26
Fri, 2002-07-26
VIS
1024 pixels (17 km)
3648 pixels (62 km)
0.017084 km/pixel
0.017208 km/pixel

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