News Release
Clues in a Crater: From India to the Surface of Mars
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
January 1, 2006
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
Researchers from WHOI, Harvard, MIT and Princeton will conduct the
second part of an intensive field and laboratory study this month at
Lonar Crater in Maharashtra, India, looking for clues about the surface
of Mars. Lonar Crater is unique among terrestrial impact sites in
that it occurs within a thick pile of basalt roughly the size of the
states of Washington and Oregon combined, known as the Deccan Traps,
making it an excellent analog for impact craters on the surface of
Mars. The crater is 1.8 kilometers (just over a mile) in diameter
and about 240 meters (790 feet) deep. The researchers are
creating a detailed geologic map of the crater coupled to a three-meter
resolution, GPS-derived digital elevation model. During this
visit they will conduct a paleomagnetic survey of the crater wall rock
and ejecta, the material thrown out from impact or eruption, to
understand shock effects on the magnetization of basalt. They
will also look at the conditions necessary for the development and the
formation of the thick blanket of ejecta.
Originally published: January 1, 2006

