Impact features adjacent to the permanent North Polar Cap on Mars provide a unique perspective on the crater formation and modification process. Little attention has been previously paid to the dozen's of ice-associated or 'frost-filled' craters north of 70N on Mars. We have examined Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) cross-sections of 13 of these features between 7ON and 82N in an effort to understand cavity modification processes potentially associated with the advance and retreat of the North Polar ice cap. Here we treat the general geometric properties of these impact features and focus attention on one almost entirely filled example (i.e., 32 km diameter, located at 77N, 89E) for which high resolution Viking Orbiter images (50 m per pixel) provide key constraints for interpreting MOLA's meter-precision topographic measurements.
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