Thursday, May 30, 2013

Truncated Rille in Jules Verne

A lunar rille comes to an abrupt termination at a crater rim (34.342°S, 145.430°E). LROC Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) frame M1122636898R, LRO orbit 17626, May 8, 2013; illumination from east-northeast, an approximate 1 km wide field of view at 0.74 meters resolution [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
James Ashley
LROC News System

We invite you to take a close look at this sinuous rille in Jules Verne crater on the lunar farside.

Why do we see it approach this portion of an ancient, mare-flooded crater rim and suddenly terminate?

Any flowing river of molten rock (the process responsible for most sinuous rilles) would skirt the base of such a positive-relief structure once encountered ... unless the crater rim formed after the rille. But if the crater is flooded by mare basalts (see context image below) the crater must have formed before the rille, which established itself during mare emplacement.

M192002047LR-NSJ-58b-40p-3910x5393
Simple contextual seven kilometers wide field of view shows a wide distribution of debris aprons bordering nearly every contact zone in the vicinity of this ghost crater on the floor of Jules Verne. View a much larger rendition HERE. LROC NAC mosaic M192002047LR, orbit 13328, May 18, 2012; 66.47° angle of incidence, resolution 0.72 meters per pixel from 70.65 km [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
LROC Wide Angle Camera (WAC) mosaic covering a 100 km wide field of view, including the western interior of Jules Verne [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
A clue may be present within the rille itself. Note the sloping wall of debris entering the rille at the point where it encounters the crater wall near the center of the Featured Image. This is accumulated debris, which has been shed from the crater rim. If you look closely at the full NAC frame, HERE, you can also see a subtle break in slope around the perimeter of the crater wall that betrays the presence of a debris apron or pediment.

This eroded material may have buried other portions of rille that might indeed have skirted the original rim, giving the visible portion an appearance of protruding out of the rim at a sharp angle. Can you find any additional clues that would help solve the puzzle?

Other examples of rilles are highlighted in the LROC Featured Image posts "Meanders in Posidonius," "The Old and the Young in Tsiolkovskiy," and "Rimae Prinz Region - Constellation Region of Interest."

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