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The Spider
Date: 14 Jan 2008
The Narrow Angle Camera of the Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS) on the MESSENGER spacecraft obtained this high-resolution image of the floor of the Caloris basin.
In an area unseen by Mariner 10 and near the center of the basin, this remarkable feature -- nicknamed "the spider" by the science team -- was revealed. A set of troughs radiates outward in a geometry unlike anything seen by Mariner 10. The radial troughs are interpreted to be the result of extension (breaking apart) of the floor materials that filled the Caloris basin after its formation.
Other troughs near the center form a polygonal pattern. This type of polygonal pattern of troughs is also seen along the interior margin of the Caloris basin. An impact crater about 40 km (~25 miles) in diameter appears to be centered on "the spider." The straight-line segments of the crater walls may have been influenced by pre-existing extensional troughs, but some of the troughs may have formed at the time that the crater was excavated.
Last Update: 1 Apr 2011 (AMB)
Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington
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