Emily Lakdawalla • Dec 26, 2010
Door 26 in the 2010 advent calendar
Time to open the twenty-sixth door in the advent calendar. Until the New Year, I'll be opening a door onto a different landscape from somewhere in the solar system. Where in the solar system is this rayed crater?
This is Kamil crater in Egypt, which is notable for a couple of reasons: it was first noticed in Google Earth images (though "precovered" in satellite images dating back to 1972), and it has rays, which makes it very unusual among Earth craters. There are rayed craters elsewhere in the solar system, of course, but they're not at all common on Earth. Rays are the hallmark of a relatively fresh impact crater; older craters don't have them, as space weathering and other small-scale erosional processes wipe them away. On other worlds, "relatively fresh" can still mean "millions of years old." On Earth, though, with its active geology, rays don't last nearly that long; this crater is estimated to be fewer than 10,000 years old.
I wanted to write more about this crater when the press releases appeared about it but just never had time. So here's a link to the original Science article and the Wikipedia entry on it!
The Planetary Society Blog 2010 Advent Calendar