Caloris Montes

Caloris Montes
Feature type Montes
Eponym Heat's Mountains

The Caloris Montes (latin for "Heat's Mountains") are a range of mountains on Mercury. They are a system of linear hills and valleys that extend more than 1000 km to the northeast from the mountainous rim of Caloris Basin in the Shakespeare quadrangle (H-3).[1] It consists of numerous rectilinear massifs 1 to 2 km high and about 10 to 50 km long, mostly elongate radially from center of basin and separated by hackly-floored, radial troughs and gougelike structures. The surfaces of the massifs are hackly. It is best developed along inner edge of basin where steep inward-facing scarps are common, grading outward into smaller massifs and blocks. It marks the crest of most prominent ring structure around Caloris. Type area: region near 18°, 184.5° (FDS 229). It is thought to be composed of uplifted prebasin bedrock covered by deep-seated late ejecta from Caloris. The inner boundary is approximately the outer limit of crater of excavation.[2]

The Caloris Montes are similar to the so-called lunar Imbrium sculpture. It is generally believed that this type of lineated surface feature resulted from excavations by secondary projectiles when the large basins were formed and, possibly, fracturing and faulting of the planet's crust during the basin formation.[1] Caloris Montes are only the innermost formation of the Caloris Group of formations produced by the Caloris Basin impact.

A gap is present in the Caloris Montes toward the southeast; its origin is unknown, but it is somewhat similar to the gap on the east side of the Imbrium Basin, where the mountain ring cuts the edge of the Serenitatis Basin. On Mercury, however, we have no evidence for the presence of a preexisting basin east of Caloris.

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