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Geology of the Victoria quadrangle (H02), Mercury

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Version 2 2016-07-21, 08:12
Version 1 2016-06-16, 23:22
journal contribution
posted on 2016-07-21, 08:12 authored by V. Galluzzi, L. Guzzetta, L. Ferranti, G. Di Achille, D. A. Rothery, P. Palumbo

Mercury’s quadrangle H02 ‘Victoria’ is located in the planet’s northern hemisphere and lies between latitudes 22.5° N and 65° N, and between longitudes 270° E and 360° E. This quadrangle covers 6.5% of the planet’s surface with a total area of almost 5 million km2. Our 1:3,000,000-scale geologic map of the quadrangle was produced by photo-interpretation of remotely sensed orbital images captured by the MESSENGER spacecraft. Geologic contacts were drawn between 1:300,000 and 1:600,000 mapping scale and constitute the boundaries of intercrater, intermediate and smooth plains units; in addition, three morpho-stratigraphic classes of craters larger than 20 km were mapped. The geologic map reveals that this area is dominated by Intercrater Plains encompassing some almost-coeval, probably younger, Intermediate Plains patches and interrupted to the north-west, north-east and east by the Calorian Northern Smooth Plains. This map represents the first complete geologic survey of the Victoria quadrangle at this scale, and an improvement of the existing 1:5,000,000 Mariner 10-based map, which covers only 36% of the quadrangle.

Funding

This research was supported by the Italian Space Agency (ASI) within the SIMBIOSYS project [ASI-INAF agreement number I/022/10/0]. Rothery was funded by the UK Space Agency (UKSA) and STFC.

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