HiPOD: Saturday, 14 August 2021
A One-Kilometer Crater on the Floor of Saheki Crater

A One-Kilometer Crater on the Floor of Saheki Crater
This HiRISE image shows several smaller craters that formed on the floor of Saheki Crater, an 85-kilometer diameter impact crater north of the Hellas Basin.

The western portion of this crater is covered by alluvial fan-like deposits that emanate from channels that cut into the crater rim. This HiRISE image—indicated by a white box atop of a colorized THEMIS temperature image of Saheki—was taken just east of the central uplift, where vividly colored materials now lie exposed in a kilometer-sized crater.

An enhanced color infrared image shows a close-up of the 1-kilometer crater and its contents. The wall of the crater shows a rainbow-like array of bedrock and deposits. Much of this material has been eroded over time and has slumped downwards towards the crater floor, leaving behind chalk-like streaks of color. We can also see reddish and dark-toned layered deposits to the south now covered by the crater’s green-toned ejecta.

ID: ESP_044913_1580
date: 25 February 2016
altitude: 258 km

https://uahirise.org/hipod/ESP_044913_1580
NASA/JPL-Caltech/UArizona
#Mars #science #NASA

Black & white is less than 5 km across; enhanced color is less than 1 km. For full observation details, visit the ID link.