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Asteroids provide fundamental clues to the formation and evolution of planetesimals. Collisional models based on the depletion of the primordial main belt of asteroids predict 10–15 craters >400 km should have formed on Ceres, the largest object between Mars and Jupiter,

Asteroids provide fundamental clues to the formation and evolution of planetesimals. Collisional models based on the depletion of the primordial main belt of asteroids predict 10–15 craters >400 km should have formed on Ceres, the largest object between Mars and Jupiter, over the last 4.55 Gyr. Likewise, an extrapolation from the asteroid Vesta would require at least 6–7 such basins. However, Ceres’ surface appears devoid of impact craters >∼280 km. Here, we show a significant depletion of cerean craters down to 100–150 km in diameter. The overall scarcity of recognizable large craters is incompatible with collisional models, even in the case of a late implantation of Ceres in the main belt, a possibility raised by the presence of ammoniated phyllosilicates. Our results indicate that a significant population of large craters has been obliterated, implying that long-wavelength topography viscously relaxed or that Ceres experienced protracted widespread resurfacing.

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    Title
    • The Missing Large Impact Craters on Ceres
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    Date Created
    2016-07-26
    Resource Type
  • Text
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    Identifier
    • Digital object identifier: 10.1038/ncomms12257
    • Identifier Type
      International standard serial number
      Identifier Value
      2041-1723
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    Marchi, S., Ermakov, A. I., Raymond, C. A., Fu, R. R., O’Brien, D. P., Bland, M. T., . . . Russell, C. T. (2016). The missing large impact craters on Ceres. Nature Communications, 7, 12257. doi:10.1038/ncomms12257

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