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Vestalia Terra

Coordinates:3°44′S33°28′E / 3.73°S 33.47°E /-3.73; 33.47
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Highland plateau on Vesta

Vestalia Terra
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A composite image of the Numisia Quadrangle on Vesta fromDawn, centered on the cratered highlands of Vestalia Terra
Feature typePlateau
Location4 Vesta
Coordinates3°44′S33°28′E / 3.73°S 33.47°E /-3.73; 33.47[1]
Surface area~80000 km2 (31000 sq mi)[2]: 91 
Dimensions~300–430 km (190–270 mi)(North-south}
~160–200 km (99–124 mi)(East-west)[2]: 91 
Peak~20 km (12 mi)(mean)[3]
DiscovererDawn
EponymVestalia

Vestalia Terra (/vɛˈstliəˈtɛrə/) is a large highland plateau on the giant asteroidVesta. Situated in Vesta's eastern hemisphere, Vestalia Terra is located near the equator and hosts the tallest point on Vesta. One of the largest named features on Vesta, it contains some of the most ancient terrain known on the asteroid. Additionally, Vestalia Terra is one of the few remaining magmatic features discovered on Vesta.

Observation and naming

[edit]

Vestalia Terra was identified as a major Vestian surface feature soon after theDawn orbiter's arrival on 16 July 2011.[4][2]: 91  The nameVestalia Terra was officially approved by theInternational Astronomical Union (IAU) on 27 December 2011; the name derives from theancient Roman festival ofVestalia, aJune festival dedicated to thegoddessVesta.[1]

Geography

[edit]
A labelled map of Vestalia Terra
A map of the Numisia Quadrangle with features labelled

Located in Vesta's eastern hemisphere, Vestalia Terra is centered near the equator and extends between roughly 32°S to 24°N and 0°E to 76°E.[1] The plateau is largely bounded by steepcliffs that represent the rims of several major impact basins:Postumia to the north,Feralia to the east,Rheasilvia to the southeast, andVeneneia to the southwest. Additionally,Saturnalia Fossae lies adjacent to Vestalia Terra to the northeast; however,Divalia Fossae, which cuts across the majority of Vesta's equator, does not intrude into Vestalia Terra.

Named features

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Within Vestalia Terra is the small mountain Brumalia Tholus and several named craters. Additionally, two namedcrater chains cross Vestalia Terra: Albalonga Catena in the east, and Robigalia Catena in the west.[2]: 91, 95  Below is a list of all named features located within Vestalia Terra.

FeatureTypeDiameter[a]EponymCoordinates
Brumalia TholusMountain48.21 kmBrumalia6.31°S, 64.99°N[5]
Albalonga CatenaCrater chain161.74 kmAlba Longa7.17°S, 72.61°E[6]
Robigalia CatenaCrater chain79.21 kmRobigalia14.04°S, 19.78°E[7]
CorneliaCrater14.9 kmCornelia9.37°S, 15.57°E[8]
DrusillaCrater20.34 kmJulia Drusilla15.05°S, 51.22°N[9]
FabiaCrater11.62 kmFabia15.53°N, 55.76°E[10]
NumisiaCrater29.94 kmNumisia7.48°S, 37.25°E[11]
TeiaCrater6.69 kmTeia3.44°S, 61.06°E[12]
VibidiaCrater7.10 kmVibidia26.96°S, 10.30°E[13]

Geology and characteristics

[edit]

Vestalia Terra is a large, roughlypentagonal plateau ~365 by ~180 km, with an estimated surface area of approximately 80,000 square kilometers. Though very topographically prominent, with an average elevation of 20 kilometers above the surrounding terrain,[3] there are localized variations in height. A broad valley partially separates the northern regions from the rest of Vestalia Terra, and a large unnamed mountain range in southern Vestalia Terra is Vesta's highest feature.[2]: 91  Though Divalia Fossae does not extend into Vestalia Terra, a series of three pit chains—including Albalonga Catena and Robigalia Catena—within Vestalia Terra that are roughly aligned in the direction of Divalia Fossae's troughs. The orientation of these pit chains likely indicate that underground faulting took place at Vestalia Terra, though limited in extent by stronger rock.[14][2]: 95, 99  As Vestalia Terra predates Divalia Fossae and all of its bordering basins suggests that it is an ancient feature, probably one of the oldest identified on Vesta.[2]: 99 

The surface of Vestalia Terra is blanketed by ejecta from the bordering Veneneia and Rheasilvia basins.[2]: 100  Compositionally, most of Vestalia Terra's surface is rather uniform, dominated byhowardite—a mixture ofdiogenite andeucrite with large amounts oforthopyroxene andolivine[15]: 31 —with a few outliers. In particular, ejecta blasted out by theimpact event that created Teia transition from diogenite-enriched material close to the impact site, and eucrite-enriched near the edge of the ejecta blanket.[16] A linear band of dark material, informally nicknamed thedark ribbon by researchers, stretches across Vestalia Terra from the southeast to the northwest. Analysis fromDawn'sVIR instrument shows that the dark material is compositionally similar to most of Vestalia Terra, albeit with finer particles, suggesting that the materia is in fact a massive ejecta streak from Drusilla. How the ejecta managed to travel so far from Drusilla remains unclear, though in 2014 a team of planetary scientists led by D. L. Buczkowski proposed that thevaporization and outgassing ofvolatiles such ashydroxide could have helped the ejecta to "glide" along the surface.[2]: 95, 101 

Vesta's lower crust and uppermantle is composed of greater amounts of diogenite compared to its upper crust and surface, as indicated by the surface composition of the Rheasilvia basin which is deep enough to expose material from the lower crust and probably the upper mantle. That some craters within Vestalia Terra, such as Teia, have blasted out diogenite from their respective impact sites indicates that the interior of Vestalia Terra is composed of denser diogenite-rich material.[2]: 99  This is supported by the detection of a large positive gravity anomaly at Vestalia Terra, where gravity is slightly stronger and therefore indicates a largemass concentration from denser mantle material.[17] The material could represent an ancientigneous intrusion intosills, or potentially even an ancientmantle plume. Regardless,magmatic activity in Vestalia Terra confirms that Vesta formed and evolved like theterrestrial planets.[16][2]: 99 

Brumalia Tholus

[edit]
Diagram
A cross-sectional diagram of alaccolith, likely representative of Brumalia Tholus's interior structure

Located in eastern Vestalia Terra is Brumalia Tholus, a small elongated dome-shaped hill with steep slopes. Brumalia Tholus sits to the west of and is aligned with Albalonga Catena, though a series of pits to the west of Brumalia Tholus suggest that Albalonga Catena continues westwards of the mountain. Brumalia Tholus likely represents a magmaticlaccolith, where intruding magma from adike does not erupt but still has enough pressure to dome the surface upwards. The location of the mountain on Albalonga Catena may indicate that the fault that created Albalonga Catena served as a conduit for magma to ascend.[16][2]: 96 

Notes

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  1. ^The given values for Albalonga Catena and Robigalia Catena are their respective lengths

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Vestalia Terra".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program. (Center Latitude: -3.73°, Center Longitude: 33.47°; Planetocentric, East+)
  2. ^abcdefghijklBuczkowski, D. L.; Wyrick, D. Y.; Toplis, M. (4 April 2014)."The unique geomorphology and physical properties of the Vestalia Terra plateau"(PDF).Icarus.244:89–103.Bibcode:2014Icar..244...89B.doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2014.03.035.hdl:2286/R.I.28072.
  3. ^abJaumann, R.; Williams, D. A.; Buczkowski, D. L. (11 May 2012). "Vesta's Shape and Morphology".Science.336 (6082): 687–.Bibcode:2012Sci...336..687J.doi:10.1126/science.1219122.PMID 22582254.
  4. ^Vega, Priscilla; Brown, Dwayne (16 July 2011)."NASA's Dawn Spacecraft Enters Orbit Around Asteroid Vesta".NASA. Archived fromthe original on 19 June 2012. Retrieved17 July 2011.
  5. ^"Brumalia Tholus".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  6. ^"Albalonga Catena".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  7. ^"Robigalia Catena".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  8. ^"Cornelia".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  9. ^"Drusilla".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  10. ^"Fabia".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  11. ^"Numisia".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  12. ^"Teia".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  13. ^"Vibidia".Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  14. ^Buczkowski, D. L.; Scully, J. E. C.; Raymond, C. A.; Russell, C. T. (September 2017).The Tectonics of Ceres and Vesta(PDF). European Planetary Science Congress 2017. Riga, Latvia.Bibcode:2017EPSC...11..920B. EPSC2017-920.Archived(PDF) from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved21 May 2024.
  15. ^Holland, Heinrich D.; Turekian, Karl K., eds. (2003)."Meteorites, Comets, and Planets".Treatise on Geochemistry. Elsevier Science.ISBN 978-0-08-043751-4.
  16. ^abcDe Sanctis, M. C.; Ammannito, E.; Buczkowski, D. (2 May 2014). "Compositional evidence of magmatic activity on Vesta".Geophysical Research Letters.41 (9):3038–3044.Bibcode:2014GeoRL..41.3038D.doi:10.1002/2014GL059646.
  17. ^Raymond, Carol A.; Park, Ryan S.; Asmar, Sami W.; et al. (April 2013).Vestalia Terra: An Ancient Mass Anomaly In The Southern Hemisphere Of Vesta(PDF). EGU General Assembly 2013. Vienna, Austria.Bibcode:2013EGUGA..1512408R. EGU2013-12408. Retrieved21 May 2024.
Geography
(features)
Craters
Troughs
Regions
Image of Vesta by the Dawn orbiter
Astronomy
Discovery
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