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The Once and Future Moon Blog, Written by Paul D. Spudis

November 17, 2011

Slopes, Streaks and Flows

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Dark and light streaks on crater walls, Moon. (click to enlarge)

Although the Moon’s gravity is low, only about 0.165 of the Earth, rock and soil move down slope over time.  In geology, such processes are called mass wasting and is one of the principal sources of erosion on the Moon (the other being meteorite bombardment).  Mass wasting includes both gradual, infinitesimally slow soil creep on slopes and rapid, catastrophic mass movements, called landslides.  Long trains of rock debris can form scree slopes, loose fragments lying precariously at the critical angle beyond which they move, the angle of repose.  Because impact craters make steep walls and the larger ones bring up peaks in their centers, most mass wasting on the Moon is found in and around impact craters of all sizes.

As the number of high resolution images taken from the LRO mission continues to proliferate, several interesting and underappreciated lunar surface phenomena are becoming more apparent.  Among the fresh craters of the Moon, we find light and dark steaks on the walls of the ubiquitous craters of the Moon.  Although it is not surprising that material might move or flow down steep slopes on the Moon, the appearance of these flows can be startlingly similar to those seen on other planets, particularly Mars, where such streaks have been cited as evidence for the presence of subsurface water.

The new narrow angle LRO camera can see objects on the surface smaller than one meter (typically, 50 cm per pixel resolution).  These new views have shown us a wide diversity of new features within impact craters and have given us a new appreciation for mass wasting.  Larger crater walls are slumped, with stair step-like wall terraces, concentrically arranged around the crater between rim and floor.  In detail, these terraces show ponds of dark material that seem to collect in low areas.  Most of this material looks like it was once molten but now congealed; it is probably solidified impact melt.  Flows of melt may cascade down and over the walls of fresh craters.

However, many “flows” of both dark and light material on the Moon seem to consist of loose fragments of rock debris lying on steep slopes.  These debris flows show a variety of morphologies, including simple flow shapes, cascades, ponding, and fan-like termini.  Sometimes the dark and light flows intermingle within a single crater while others show only one type.  These debris flows can usually be traced back to outcrops of bedrock in the upper portions of the crater wall.  As the bedrock erodes (usually by meteorite erosion and disaggregation due to the intense fracturing induced by the original impact that formed the crater), it sheds small fragments that train down slope, forming flow-like landforms.

Because crater walls are uneven, undulating surfaces, the rates of down slope movement can vary widely over small distances.  This sometimes results in multiple, overlapping flows of debris.  Factors that control the albedo (reflectivity) of the debris flows are not well understood.  It could be related to composition (for example, dark, iron-rich mare basalt vs. white, anorthositic highland rocks).  Another factor might be particle size; small pebble-sized rock flows could be bright as new, fresh surfaces are constantly exposed.  Flows that contain mixed soil might be darker than normal, as this soil could cover the fragments and reduce its average reflectivity.  But while all these factors may be of significance to one degree or another, the brightness of a streak is not particularly indicative of origin.

Dark streaks on crater walls, Mars. (click to enlarge)

On Mars, many dark streaks are evident on crater walls and, as on the Moon, come in a wide variety of forms and occurrences.  Martian dark streaks have been variously interpreted as being caused by compositional and particle size differences, but the most popular idea is that the dark streaks are wet soil, i.e., they represent areas where liquid water is seeping out from the planet’s subsurface and moistening the surface.  One observation supporting this idea is an apparent correlation of some of the dark streaks with surface temperature, with warmer slopes showing more.  As liquid water is not stable on the martian surface, salt-rich brines (which would have much lower melting points than pure water) have been invoked as the possible liquid phase.

The dark streaks on the crater walls of the Moon call water-related interpretations of similar features on Mars into question.  The nature of down slope movement on Mars is likely to be controlled by even more diverse factors than the lunar case.  For example, large landslides partly cover the floor of the Valles Marineris, the large canyon system on Mars.  These landslides can extend tens of kilometers across the valley floor and the mass flow might have been lubricated by trapped atmospheric gas; this “cushioning” effect occurs within some landslides on the Earth.  Such a process would not occur on the Moon.  The diversity of geological processes on Mars suggests that explanations for dark wall streaks could encompass many more possibilities than simple wetting of the surface.

Although the existence of dark lunar streaks does not negate water-related interpretations of similar features on Mars, they do call attention to the need to keep alternative hypotheses in mind.  For many years (and with some success), planetary geologists have extrapolated landforms and processes (thought to be understood) on Earth, to similar appearing features on the planets.  In the case of the dark streaks, terrestrial water seepages in the desert can be darker than surrounding desiccated terrain.  A wide variety of evidence indicates that water is present in the subsurface on Mars but sometimes other effects such as rock composition or particle size are responsible for the streaks and alternatives to seepage should always be kept in mind.



Posted By: Paul D. Spudis — Lunar Exploration,Lunar Science | Link | Comments (6)


6 Comments

  1. I’ve always wondered whether what are often explained as images of large scale water flows on Mars aren’t actually largely the result of billions of years of aeolian effects on the surface and erosion by wind-borne particles, something else the Moon doesn’t have.

    Comment by Ken Murphy — November 17, 2011 @ 7:49 pm


  2. We’ve been seeing these dark streaks on Mars for many years. They tend to lighten over time, and, unlike the lunar flows, show no visible relief, so I am convinced that they are water (brine) flows. As the water evaporates the streaks gradually disappear.

    Comment by Dick Morris — November 17, 2011 @ 9:00 pm


  3. Ken,

    whether what are often explained as images of large scale water flows on Mars aren’t actually largely the result of billions of years of aeolian effects

    Possibly for some of the smaller features, but most eolian erosional landforms have a morphology distinct from those made by fluvial processes. However, the large outflow channels are difficult to explain by anything other than catastrophic flows of water.

    Comment by Paul D. Spudis — November 18, 2011 @ 4:22 am


  4. unlike the lunar flows, show no visible relief

    Not diagnostic — see bottom right image in lunar composite above.

    Comment by Paul D. Spudis — November 18, 2011 @ 4:22 am


  5. Looks to me like there is some relief. A better photo with a different sun angle would show it better. A wider angle view showing the beginning and end of the streaks would also help.

    I also take a dim view of the “impact melt” hypothesis, as you may recall. The “ponds” of dark material generally appear to have collected in pockets formed by slumping of the crater walls, which would probably have occurred long after the impact ejecta had fallen back to the surface and cooled.

    Comment by Dick Morris — November 18, 2011 @ 11:54 pm


  6. It always amazes me how real that mirage appears up ahead on the road, even when you know that it is an illusion.

    Comment by Nelson Bridwell — November 19, 2011 @ 11:52 pm


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    Paul D. Spudis is a Senior Staff Scientist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston, Texas. The opinions expressed are his own, and do not reflect the views of his employer or the Smithsonian Institution.
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