Updated
Updated · Science News Magazine · Jul 10
Researchers Identify 6 Pluto Landslides Up to 130 Square Kilometers From New Horizons Reanalysis
Updated
Updated · Science News Magazine · Jul 10

Researchers Identify 6 Pluto Landslides Up to 130 Square Kilometers From New Horizons Reanalysis

3 articles · Updated · Science News Magazine · Jul 10

Summary

  • Six large landslides have been identified on Pluto, marking the first definitive detections on the dwarf planet; the biggest covers about 130 square kilometers, roughly twice Manhattan’s size.
  • New Horizons images from the 2015 flyby yielded the finds after researchers reanalyzed the data for steep cliffs and terrain with distinct tone and texture, locating all six along impact-crater rims near Sputnik Planitia.
  • The features rise about 1,500 to 2,200 meters and appear to travel farther than similarly tall landslides elsewhere, suggesting lower average friction in material moving down Pluto’s slopes.
  • That low-friction signal could help constrain Pluto’s surface material properties, and the team says more landslides likely remain hidden in existing data pending further analysis and future missions.

Insights

What unique ice physics allows Pluto's massive landslides to slide for miles with almost no friction?
Pluto is surprisingly active. Could a future mission find a subsurface ocean hidden beneath its shifting surface?
This discovery was hidden in old data. What other secrets are waiting in NASA's vast mission archives?