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