{ "title": "The Great Spillover", "authors": "HiRISE", "metadata": { "thumbnailURL": "https://static.uahirise.org/anews/2020-03-06/ESP_055504_1360.jpg", "excerpt": "A lobe-shaped ejecta blanket looks like it spilled over into a flat-floored, more eroded crater to the north." }, "version": "1.5", "identifier": "ESP_055504_1360", "language": "en", "layout": { "columns": 10, "width": 1024, "margin": 85, "gutter": 20 }, "documentStyle": { "backgroundColor": "#faf7f2" }, "components": [ { "role": "heading1", "layout": "heading1Layout", "text": "HiPOD: 6 MARCH 2020" }, { "role": "divider", "layout": "bigDividerLayout", "stroke": { "width": 3, "color": "#8c2028" } }, { "role": "title", "layout": "halfMarginBelowLayout", "text": "The Great Spillover" }, { "role": "photo", "layout": "fullBleedLayout", "caption": "Less than 1 km across. (NASA/JPL/UArizona)", "URL": "https://static.uahirise.org/anews/2020-03-06/ESP_055504_1360.jpg" }, { "role": "body", "format": "html", "layout": "hipodMarginLayout", "text": "
A lobe-shaped ejecta blanket looks like it spilled over into a flat-floored, more eroded crater to the north. Did the walls of the crater erode back and leave these mounds/remnants on the floor?
Below is a non-narrated HiClip mini of the full observation (less than 5 km across).
ID: ESP_055504_1360
date: 30 May 2018
altitude: 252 km
NASA/JPL/UArizona