There are a number of different types of craters that have been observed and studied on Mars. Many of them are shaped by the effects of impacts into ice-rich ground.[1][2]
Rampart craters shows fluidized ejecta features. They look like mud was formed during the impact. There are several basic types of rampart craters.[2]
The single-layered ejecta type has a single rampart at the edge of the ejecta. It is thought that these impacted into an icy layer, but did not go through the layer.[1][3]
Rampart crater of the single-layered ejecta type, as seen by CTX Arrows indicate the outer edge, called the rampart.
Another rampart crater in the double-layer ejection crater. It's ejecta has two lobes. Studies have demonstrated that these can be formed from impacts that went all the way through an upper, icy layer and penetrated into a rocky layer that lies beneath the icy layer.[4]
Steinheim Crater which shows more than one layer of ejecta, as seen by CTX These are called double-layered ejecta craters.
A third type of rampart crater, the multiple-layered ejecta crater, is similar to a double-layer crater, but it has more than two lobes or layers of ejecta.[5]
Multiple-layer ejecta crater
A study of the distribution of these craters demonstrated that the thickness of a frozen layer on Mars varies from about 1.3 km (equator) to 3.3 km (poles). This represents a great deal of frozen water. It would be equal to 200 meters of water spread over the entire planet, if one assumes the ground has 20% pore space. The researchers assumed that the single-layer ejecta craters would all be within the icy layer, but the double and multiple layer ejecta craters would always penetrate the icy layer.[6][7] By finding an average of the largest single-layer ejecta crater depth and the smallest multiple-layer ejecta crater depth, the thickness of the icy layer, called the cryosphere was determined.[8]
Single-layer ejecta craters only penetrate into the icy upper layer, as shown on the left. Multiple-layer ejecta craters go all the way through the icy layer and somewhat into the lower, ice-free layer (right).
Pancake craters
In the Mariner and Viking missions a type of crater was found that was called a "pancake crater." It is similar to a rampart crater, but does not have a rampart. The ejecta is flat along its whole area, like a pancake. Under higher resolutions it resembles a double-layer crater that has degraded. These craters are found in the same latitudes as double-layer craters (40-65 degrees).[9] It has been suggested that they are just the inner layer of a double-layer crater in which the outer, thin layer has eroded.[10] Craters classified as pancakes in Viking images, turned out to be double-layer craters when seen at higher resolutions by later spacecraft.[11][12]
Pancake crater, note the flat top and lack of a visible rampart. Image is from CTX.
LARLE craters are characterized by a crater and normal layered ejecta pattern surrounded by an extensive but thin outer deposit which ends in a flame-like shape.[13] The name LARLE stands ‘low-aspect-ratio layered ejecta.[14] The low aspect part of the name refers to the outer part being very thin. This outer thin layer is thought to erode away and the resulting crater would be a pedestal crater.[15][16] If the outer layer were not there, the crater would be the same size as a pedestal crater.
LARLE crater, as seen by CTX LARLE layer that is composed of fine-grained material is labeled. It may be eroded away and a pedestal crater will remain.[17]
A pedestal crater has its ejecta sitting above the surrounding terrain and thereby forming a raised platform (like a pedestal). They form when an impact crater ejects material which forms an erosion-resistant layer, thus causing the immediate area to erode more slowly than the rest of the region.[18][19][20][21]
Pedestal crater, as seen by HiRISE under HiWish program. Top layer has protected the lower material from being eroded.
An expanded crater is a type of secondary impact crater.[22] Large impacts often create swarms of small secondary craters from the debris that is blasted out as a consequence of the impact.[22] Studies of a type of secondary craters, called expanded craters, have given us insights into places where abundant ice may be present in the ground. Expanded craters have lost their rims, this may be because any rim that was once present has collapsed into the crater during expansion or, lost its ice, if composed of ice.
Close view of expanded craters, as seen by HiRISE After the impact, ice left the ground and made the crater larger in diameter.
^ abWeiss, D., J. Head. 2014. Ejecta mobility of layered ejecta craters on Mars: Assessing the influence of snow and ice deposits. Icarus: 233, 131-146.
^Baratoux, D. 2002. An instability mechanism in the formation of the martian lobate craters and the implications for the rheology of ejecta: Geophys. Res. Lett. 29, 1210
^Schwegman, R. 2015. MORPHOLOGY AND MORPHOMETRY OF DOUBLE LAYERED EJECTA CRATERS ON MARS. The School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies The University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada.
^Barlow, N., et al. 2000. Standardizing the nomenclature of Martian impact crater ejecta morphologies. J. Geophysical Res. 105, 26733_26738.
^Barlow, N., T. Bradley. 1990. martian impact craters: correlations of ejecta and interior morphologies with diameter, latitude, and terrain. Icarus: 87, 156- 179.
^Oberbeck, V. 2009. Layered ejecta craters and the early water/ice aquifer on Mars. Meteoritics Planet Sci. Archives: 44, 43-54.
^Head, J., D. Weiss. 2017. Evidence for stabilization of the ice-cemented crysphere in earlier martian history: Implications for the current abundance of groundwater at depth on Mars. Icarus: 288, 120-147.
^Mouginis-Mark, P. 1979. Martian fluidized crater morphology: Variations with crater size, latitude, altitude, and target material. Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth: 84, 8011-8022.
^Costard, F. 1989. The spatial distributions of volatiles in the Martian hydrolithosphere, EARTH, MOON, AND PLANETS: 45, 265-290.
^Barlow, N. MARTIAN IMPACT CRATERS AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS FOR TARGET CHARACTERISTICS.
^Kieffer, H.et al. 1992. Mars. University of Arizona Press, Tucson
^Barlow, N., J. Boyce, C. Cornwalc. Martian Low-Aspect-Ratio Layered Ejecta (LARLE) craters: Distribution, characteristics, and relationship to pedestal craters. Icarus:239, 186-200.
^McCauley, J. F. (1973). "Mariner 9 evidence for wind erosion in the equatorial and mid-latitude regions of Mars". Journal of Geophysical Research. 78 (20): 4123–4137. Bibcode:1973JGR....78.4123M. doi:10.1029/JB078i020p04123.