Rugged crater ejecta as a guide to megaregolith thickness in the southern nearside of the Moon
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The southern highlands of the Moon comprise superposed ejecta layers, individually as thick as a few kilometers, from the major basins. Smaller (1-16-km-diameter) impact craters that penetrate this layered megaregolith and excavate material from depth have radar properties that provide insight into the variability of megaregolith thickness above a postulated basement of large crustal blocks. We observe a significant difference in the population of radar-bright craters, 1-16 km and larger in diameter, between regions of the southeastern near-side highlands north and south of ~lat 48{degrees}S. There are about one-third more radar-bright craters north of this line than to the south, broadly coincident with the mapped boundary between southern deposits mapped as pre-Nectarian age and those of Nectarian-Imbrian age to the north. The radar-bright crater population is consistent with a megaregolith thickness of ~1.5 km in the north and ~2.5 km in the south, a difference we attribute to South Pole-Aitken basin ejecta.