The formation of large impact basins (diameter D ≥ 300 km) was an important process in the early geological evolution of Mercury and influenced the planet's topography, stratigraphy, and crustal structure. We catalog and characterize this basin population on Mercury from global observations by the MESSENGER spacecraft, and we use the new data to evaluate basins suggested on the basis of the Mariner 10 flybys. Forty-six certain or probable impact basins are recognized; a few additional basins that may have been degraded to the point of ambiguity are plausible on the basis of new data but are classified as uncertain. The spatial density of large basins (D ≥ 500 km) on Mercury is lower than that on the Moon. Morphological characteristics of ba...
A working hypothesis of Mercury's history is presented. We infer the surface of Mercury to record a ...
Impact bombardment during the first billion years after the formation of the Moon produced at least ...
Images from MESSENGER's first flyby of Mercury have shown convincing evidence for surface volcanism....
The formation of large impact basins (diameter D greater than or equal to 300 km) was an important p...
We map large impact basins (D ≥ 300 km) on Mercury, whose distribution and characteristics are impor...
[1] We have compiled a near‐global catalog of impact cra-ters on Mercury for diameters ≥20 km from i...
The geologic histories of most terrestrial bodies are dominated by two major processes: meteorite bo...
The Mariner 10 flybys revealed the eastern third of the Caloris basin and demonstrated its importanc...
The first MESSENGER flyby of Mercury obtained images of 21% of the surface not seen by Mariner 10, i...
By using high-resolution altimetric measurements of the Moon, we produced a catalog of all impact cr...
The Mariner 10 mission in 1974 mapped about half the surface of Mercury. On the basis of these data,...
A digital terrain model (1000-m effective spatial resolution) of the Caloris basin, the largest well...
International audienceObservations from the Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) mission...
formation of its lithosphere and crust. As in the case of the Moon, the origin of early plains depos...
During the course of three flybys and an orbital mission phase that began on 18 March 2011, the MESS...
A working hypothesis of Mercury's history is presented. We infer the surface of Mercury to record a ...
Impact bombardment during the first billion years after the formation of the Moon produced at least ...
Images from MESSENGER's first flyby of Mercury have shown convincing evidence for surface volcanism....
The formation of large impact basins (diameter D greater than or equal to 300 km) was an important p...
We map large impact basins (D ≥ 300 km) on Mercury, whose distribution and characteristics are impor...
[1] We have compiled a near‐global catalog of impact cra-ters on Mercury for diameters ≥20 km from i...
The geologic histories of most terrestrial bodies are dominated by two major processes: meteorite bo...
The Mariner 10 flybys revealed the eastern third of the Caloris basin and demonstrated its importanc...
The first MESSENGER flyby of Mercury obtained images of 21% of the surface not seen by Mariner 10, i...
By using high-resolution altimetric measurements of the Moon, we produced a catalog of all impact cr...
The Mariner 10 mission in 1974 mapped about half the surface of Mercury. On the basis of these data,...
A digital terrain model (1000-m effective spatial resolution) of the Caloris basin, the largest well...
International audienceObservations from the Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) mission...
formation of its lithosphere and crust. As in the case of the Moon, the origin of early plains depos...
During the course of three flybys and an orbital mission phase that began on 18 March 2011, the MESS...
A working hypothesis of Mercury's history is presented. We infer the surface of Mercury to record a ...
Impact bombardment during the first billion years after the formation of the Moon produced at least ...
Images from MESSENGER's first flyby of Mercury have shown convincing evidence for surface volcanism....