- Marchi, S;
- Ermakov, AI;
- Raymond, CA;
- Fu, RR;
- O’Brien, DP;
- Bland, MT;
- Ammannito, E;
- De Sanctis, MC;
- Bowling, T;
- Schenk, P;
- Scully, JEC;
- Buczkowski, DL;
- Williams, DA;
- Hiesinger, H;
- Russell, CT
Asteroids provide fundamental clues to the formation and evolution of planetesimals. Collisional models based on the depletion of the primordial main belt of asteroids predict 10-15 craters >400 km should have formed on Ceres, the largest object between Mars and Jupiter, over the last 4.55 Gyr. Likewise, an extrapolation from the asteroid Vesta would require at least 6-7 such basins. However, Ceres' surface appears devoid of impact craters >∼280 km. Here, we show a significant depletion of cerean craters down to 100-150 km in diameter. The overall scarcity of recognizable large craters is incompatible with collisional models, even in the case of a late implantation of Ceres in the main belt, a possibility raised by the presence of ammoniated phyllosilicates. Our results indicate that a significant population of large craters has been obliterated, implying that long-wavelength topography viscously relaxed or that Ceres experienced protracted widespread resurfacing.