A comparison of secondary craters on the moon, Mercury, and Mars

The present investigation is concerned with the distribution of secondary crater sizes and shapes and the relation of these distributions to inferred Martian lithology and ballistic history. Differences in secondary-crater size/range distributions around unmodified craters can be attributed to differences in gravitational potential, lithologic properties, and atmospheric interactions. Wide variations found in secondary crater populations around medium-size (5-50 km) Martian craters can be interpreted as effects of contrasting target lithologies. Extensive secondary cratering and elongate secondaries of Crater I in Chryse Planitia are consistent with a competent lithology of basaltic plains, as inferred from various photogeologic studies. The relatively few large secondaries around Arandas, and their high circularity, are consistent with a lithology exhibiting low yield strength, as inferred for the fractured plains.