Oudemans (crater)
![]() Oudemans crater based on THEMIS day-time image | |
Planet | Mars |
---|---|
Coordinates | 10°00′S 91°54′W / 10.0°S 91.9°W |
Quadrangle | Phoenicis Lacus |
Diameter | 124.0 km |
Eponym | Jean Abraham Chrétien Oudemans |


Oudemans is a crater on Mars, approximately 90 kilometers in diameter, named after Dutch astronomer Jean Abraham Chrétien Oudemans (1827–1906).
Description
Oudemans crater is an example of very pristine morphology since small features in its ejecta and on its floor are preserved. Being young, it does not display water erosion on its rim. Unlike some craters, Oudemans crater does not have alluvial fans on its floor. In places, its rim has a terrace.[1]
It is located in the Phoenicis Lacus quadrangle at 10.0 deg S, 92.1 deg W. This location puts it near the intersection of Noctis Labyrinthus and the Ius Chasma of the Valles Marineris rift system. It is approximately 90 km wide, indicating it was caused by a meteorite 4.5 km in diameter. Nick Hoffman proposes that this might be the trigger that caused the formation of the flow deposits on the east end of the Valles Marineris System. He proposes that the impact heated up subsurface carbon dioxide permafrost causing explosive decompression that flooded down the Valles Marineris into the Northern Plains of Mars.[2]
The central uplift of Oudemans exposes layered rock that may be sedimentary.[3] Layered rock exposed in the central uplifts are common in terrestrial impact structures, and there is abundant layering exposed in the nearby Valles Marineris canyon system suggesting that layered deposits extend throughout the region.
Oudemans' layers are from as deep or deeper than those exposed in Valles Marineris. A comparison of the layers in Valles Marineris and in the Oudemans central uplift may prove that they are similar rock types that share the same origin. Three other craters in the area,
References
- ^ Moore, J. and A. Howard. 2005. Large alluvial fans on Mars. Journal of Geophysical Research. 110. E04005
- ^ Hoffman, Nick; White Mars: A New Model for Mars’ Surface and Atmosphere Based on CO2; Academic Press; 2000.
- ^ a b HiRISE | Oudemans Crater Central Uplift: A Sample of Well-Preserved Layering Excavated from Kilometers Below (PSP_001602_1700)