Abstract

Australe North (35.5°S, 96°E) is a pre-Nectarian impact basin north of Mare Australe, first identified using the GRAIL data. It does not show clear topographic signatures typical of any large impact structure on the Moon. However, results from GRAIL (Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory) mission suggested the presence of a ∼ 880 km wide basin whose boundary does not coincide with the earlier identified Australe Basin. In this study, we investigate the Scaliger Crater region to understand the controls that the proposed Australe North Basin played on the local geology in the region. The location of the Scaliger Crater at the intersection of the rims of two pre-Nectarian Basins, Milne and the proposed Australe North provides a unique geological setting to reconstruct the region's geological history. We provide geological evidence substantiating the existence of the rim of the Australe North Basin, as has been proposed using gravity data. Based upon the spectral signatures and morphometry, we suggest the presence of a mafic pluton and/or lower crustal/mantle rocks in the region and provide constraints on its emplacement timescale. For the first time, Late-stage volcanism has been reported inside the Bowditch Crater and Lacus Solitudinis, emplaced at ∼1.7 Ga and ∼ 2.3 Ga, respectively, suggesting prolonged volcanism at the eastern lunar nearside-farside boundary inside an obscured pre-Nectarian basin.

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