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      The Geology of Pluto and Charon Through the Eyes of New Horizons

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          Abstract

          NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has revealed the complex geology of Pluto and Charon. Pluto's encounter hemisphere shows ongoing surface geological activity centered on a vast basin containing a thick layer of volatile ices that appears to be involved in convection and advection, with a crater retention age no greater than \(\approx\)10 Ma. Surrounding terrains show active glacial flow, apparent transport and rotation of large buoyant water-ice crustal blocks, and pitting, likely by sublimation erosion and/or collapse. More enigmatic features include tall mounds with central depressions that are conceivably cryovolcanic, and ridges with complex bladed textures. Pluto also has ancient cratered terrains up to ~4 Ga old that are extensionally fractured and extensively mantled and perhaps eroded by glacial or other processes. Charon does not appear to be currently active, but experienced major extensional tectonism and resurfacing (probably cryovolcanic) nearly 4 billion years ago. Impact crater populations on Pluto and Charon are not consistent with the steepest proposed impactor size-frequency distributions proposed for the Kuiper belt.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          19 April 2016
          Article
          10.1126/science.aad7055
          1604.05702
          77b0a97a-d54f-486c-bd6f-4a5a7d31af77

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          Science 351, 1284 (2016)
          astro-ph.EP

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