Recent work by Rice et al. (Earth Surf. Process. Landforms 21 (1996) 279; Earth Surf.
Process. Landforms 22(9) (1997) 859; Earth Surf. Process. Landforms 26 (2001) 721), and
McKenna Neuman and Maxwell (Catena 38(2) (1999) 151; Earth Surf. Process. Landforms 27
(2002) 891) has contributed much to the measurement and understanding of crust strength in
relation to the impact force of particles striking a crusted surface. However, the spatial and
temporal aspects of crust destruction under impact remain largely unknown. The present
paper expands the analysis of data obtained from an earlier wind tunnel simulation of crust
destruction (McKenna Neuman and Maxwell, 2002). A detailed spatial and temporal analysis
is presented for over 4000 sites of crust loss, as preserved in photographic images that have not
been previously considered. The results suggest that the fractal dimension of the digitized
deflation features falls between 1.09 and 1.24, is consistent for any given crusted surface, and
may be positively correlated with independent measurements of crust strength. Small erosion
pits (o10mm2) can appear at any time, even after an hour or more of impact. This
observation reinforces our earlier suggestion (McKenna Neuman and Maxwell, 2002) that the
duration of impact is significant and that a fatigue-like mechanism is likely at work. While the
orientation of any given deflation feature can vary through 1801, analysis of a large sample
(n ¼ 4100) shows that on average and regardless of size, they are aligned with the air stream.