Abstract

On the Moon, the surface morphology at the scale of meters and tens of meters is typically smooth and subdued due to regolith gardening. Sharp, “crisp,” meter-scale morphologic features are observed only where the regolith is either thin or recently disturbed. Such crisp morphologies are typically created by geologically recent meteoritic impacts of different scales. The prominent exception is so-called irregular mare patches (IMPs), rare small features of debated origin. We report here on the discovery of previously unknown crisp immature morphological features (named “spiders” due to their central circular region and radiating “legs”) not related to impacts and even more rare. The spiders are meters-deep depressions with near-radial chutes open toward the center which make an incipient dendritic pattern 50–80 m in diameter. All spiders found thus far occur in clusters in the same region in Mare Tranquillitatis in the immediate proximity to small IMPs. We interpret spiders as the result of an energetic granular flow of the regolith draining into shallow subsurface voids following the sudden collapse of the roofs of the voids. Regolith gardening destroys the spiders’ legs rapidly, on a timescale of a million years. If the entrance into the subsurface void remains unclogged, a spider appears to evolve into a pit; otherwise it evolves into a gentle depression and finally disappears. Our interpretation of spiders provides a consistent explanation of all of their features, occurrence settings, and associations.

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