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Pitted Plains

Originally published October 30, 2012 LPOD-Oct30-12.jpg
image by Howard Eskildsen and US Geological Survey map from LPI's Lunar Map Collection. B and B = Buch and Büsching, Ba = Barocius,
M = Maurolycus, N = Nicoli, W = Wöhler.

In the late 1950s Gene Shoemaker, Bob Hackmann and other scientists at the US Geological Survey applied familiar mapping principals to determine the sequence of events on the Moon. The unusual aspects of their work was that no geologists had been on the lunar surace to examine closely the relationships between rock units, look for fossils and other clues that guide terrestril mapping. Shoemaker recognized that many landforms could be seen to be covered by ejecta from impact craters and basins or else sat on top of the ejecta. His classic example was the Copernicus area where that craters rays crossed Mare Imbrium and even Eratosthenes, both of which must be older. The Survey ultimately mapped the entire Moon and for each area they characterized the morphology of the surface and provided an interpretation of its origin. Back in the 60s it was assumed that volcanism occured both as mare lava flows and as widespread pyroclastic or ash flows. Many relatively smooth materials that weren't dark like maria - such as the flat floors of highland craters and the spaces between such craters - were interpreted as volcanic ash. Howard has matched one of his images with a 1972 vintage Survey geologic map of the Moon's southern highlands west of Janssen. The pinkish area indicated with the black arrow on the right was called "pitted plains" because of its relatively smooth surface pitted with small craterlets. These plains were interpreted as volcanic lavas or pyroclastics. Today we still don't know what the smooth matierals are but spectral data show no evidence for volcanic materials like the maria or lighter volcanic matierals such as the Gruithuisen domes. The general interpretation is that such light-hued smoothish plains are fluidized ejecta from the formation of the Imbrium and other basins. Who knows, they might be. This region has also been speculated to be within an ancient impact basin called Mutus-Vlacq. I like it that Howard has used his images to document an unusual area identified from the most comprehesive geologic mapping ever done for the Moon.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details
Oct 22, 2012, 00:21 UT. 6" f/8 refractor, Explore Scientific lens + 2X Barlow + IR + V-block filters + DMK41AU02.AS + Losmandy GM8 mount
+ JMI electric focuser.

Related Links
Rükl plate 67

Yesterday's LPOD: Another #1

Tomorrow's LPOD: Hunter's Moon



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