Not exact matches
I wait until
small air bubbles rise to the surface and pop
leaving tiny
craters before I flip the pancake over.
Smaller subsequent impacts
left craters within that
crater.
Secondary
craters form when big chunks of rock blasted into the air during a large impact fall back to the surface,
leaving a smattering of
small craters surrounding the main
crater.
The
smaller object in the crash is usually destroyed, but the larger object is often
left with a
crater.