Basin Crustal Structure at the Multiring Basin Transition
Abstract
Two impact basins on the Moon—Freundlich-Sharonov and Hertzsprung—are nearly the same size but exhibit different surface morphologies and subsurface structures. Gravity data reveal a bench-like transitional structure in the crust-mantle interface between the outer ring and the inner basin cavity in Hertzsprung, unlike that beneath both Freundlich-Sharonov and larger multi-ring basins. We use iSALE-2D to model the formation of impact basins into a 40-km thick pre-impact crust with a range of thermal conditions to understand the divergent development of these basins and gain insight into the factors affecting whether a basin forms with a peak-ring or multiring basin structure. We find that thermal gradients of at least 30 K/km result in Freundlich-Sharonov-type basins, in agreement with previous work. Cooler thermal gradients of approximately 15-20 K/km are needed to develop Hertzsprung-like multiring basins with observed bench-like structures in the crust-mantle topography. We find that for cooler models, the bench structure develops early in the cratering process as a rotated inner normal fault cutting the crust-mantle interface, whereas models with higher thermal gradients instead develop diffuse deformation zones instead of a discrete inner fault. The peak rings of both basins develop later in the cratering process as the collapsed central uplift. These results highlight the complex interplay between a strong lithosphere needed to develop ring faults and accessible ductile rocks that facilitate multiring basin formation. The varying thermal conditions giving rise to Hertzsprung and Freundlich-Sharonov impact basins may be a possible constraint on the lunar cooling rate and chronology.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Geophysical Research (Planets)
- Pub Date:
- April 2023
- DOI:
- 10.1029/2022JE007507
- Bibcode:
- 2023JGRE..12807507B
- Keywords:
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- impact basins;
- modeling;
- thermomechanics;
- lunar evolution