A Noir Look at Mercury’s
Mysterious Surface Evolution
Mercury’s horizon, as seen by the MESSENGER mission.
The name’s Basin, Caloris Basin, and I’m a planetary science detective. Perhaps you’ve heard of me. Of all the planets in all the solar systems in the cosmos, I’m interested in Mercury. It’s a classy place, with a great surface to boot.
So, until just a couple of days ago, things weren’t going too well for me. I’d been stonewalled with a lack of knowledge about ALL of Mercury’s surface. It was tough, and I was down to my last… well, let me tell you the whole story.
It was late on a Friday afternoon in mid-January. Business was slow. It had been for years, ever since the Cassini mission had launched, followed by New Horizons. Everybody’s attention was turned toward the outer solar system, or near-Earth asteroids, or dwarf planets beyond Neptune.
And, it seems that ever since I’d cracked the case of the sulfuric plumes in the Venusian atmosphere, inner-solar-system detective work had just dried up. Pancake eruptions on Venus were so last-century. Even Martian dust storms weren’t getting as much press as they used to. Oh, sure, the occasional asteroid-impact threat on Earth raised a little stir now and again, but in the main, it seemed like nobody cared about the inner planets any more. A pity.
I mean, there was Mercury, waiting to be explored again. Even though Mariner had given it a quick look back in the 1970s, its glory days weren’t over. Not by a long shot! Sure, its surface would be at home on a black-and-white scene from a 1940s detective movie set (without the rain and fog, though). And sure, it’s a bear to observe from Earth. But, Mercury’s got as many mysteries as those outer planets, and it’s a darned sight more rocky!
Still, all the hot researchers and their grants (and grad students) were out there at Saturn, and using Hubble and ground-based telescopes to poke around Pluto and the Kuiper Belt. They were flush with success, invoking cryovolcanism right and left to explain what they were finding! Yet, for my NSF grant money, there was a lot of good science to be done in the inner solar system. So, I resigned myself to having to wait for a while. I knew that soon I’d eventually have my day in (or actually near) the Sun. Continue reading The Case of the Lobate Scarps