Mars Express observes clusters of recent craters in Ares Vallis
7 October 2011 - ESA

Oraibi crater in Ares Vallis in context
In the distant past, probably over 3.8 billion years ago, large volumes of water must have rushed through the Ares Vallis with considerable force. Mars Express imaged the preserved aftermath of this scene on 11 May 2011.
The prominent Oraibi crater lies in the channel and is about 32 km across. It is filled with sediments and its southern rim has been eroded by water. NASA’s Pathfinder mission landed in this region in 1997, 100 km to the north of the crater and off the right-hand side of this image.
The great outflow that partially eroded Oraibi also cut stepped riverbanks and excavated parallel channels in the riverbed that indicate the flow path. Streamlined islands have been left standing above the valley floor, again indicating the direction taken by the flow.
On the floor and on the plateau to the left of the image there are a number of ’ghost craters’. These were once fully formed craters, but water or wind eroded their rims and filled them by depositing sediments. Their presence on the plateau suggests that even that higher ground may have been at least partially overrun by flooding. The solitary mounds that can be seen likely represent the remaining sections of the plateau’s original surface.
In addition to these heavily eroded, ancient features, however, there is evidence in the image for an impact on the martian surface in the much more recent past.
On the far left side of the image, parts of an ejecta blanket can be seen, made of material excavated from the ground during the formation of an impact crater. In the upper left corner of the image, there is a landslide roughly 4 km wide, probably caused by the same impact, and surrounding the landslide, single streaks of ejecta can be traced out.
Furthermore, there are numerous small craters in the image, appearing both in clusters and in aligned groups. An abundance of such craters can result when an asteroid or other projectile breaks up into many pieces in the atmosphere before crashing to the ground.
Clusters of craters may also be created when a large impact ejects rock fragments with such force that they travel from a few kilometres to hundreds of kilometres before returning to the surface, creating new impacts called secondary craters.
The clusters of craters in this image are relatively young and likely formed within the past 20 million years: erosion would have erased them if they had occurred a long time ago.
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ESA Planetary Science archive (PSA) NASA Planetary Data System HRSC data viewer
The clusters of craters in this image are relatively young and likely formed within the past 20 million years: erosion would have erased them if they had occurred a long time ago.
Rare martian lake delta spotted by Mars Express Mars’ northern polar regions in transition Phobos slips past Jupiter Springtime at Mars’ south pole Mars Express sees deep fractures on Mars Neighbouring volcanoes on Mars The scars of impacts on Mars Mars Express puts craters on a pedestal Mars Express close flybys of martian moon Phobos Wind and water have shaped Schiaparelli on Mars Light and dark in the Phoenix Lake Mars: how low can you go? Mars’s mysterious elongated crater Rocky mounds and a plateau on Mars Wet era on early Mars was global Volcanic ash in Meridiani Planum Craters young and old in Sirenum Fossae Craters, lava flows and tectonic features near Ma’adim Vallis Craters and channels in Hephaestus Fossae Chaotic terrain in Ariadnes Colles Ice-covered martian North Pole The Euminedes Dorsum mountains on Mars Lava deposits in Mangala Fossae
ESA Planetary Science archive (PSA) NASA Planetary Data System HRSC data viewer
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