Lunar rockfalls are ubiquitous mass wasting features that were first observed in Lunar Orbiter high-resolution photographs in the late 1960s (Eggleston et al., 1968;Filice, 1967;Moore, 1970). Rockfall events, which have been previously referred to as block falls or rolling boulders, involve the detachment of a boulder or rock mass from an elevated source region, which then slides, bounces, and rolls down the local topographic gradient, ultimately depositing downslope. Despite the fact that these features were recognized in the late 1960's, all early studies have only examined rockfalls in relatively small geographic areas on the lunar surface, because of a lack of available high resolution imagery (e.g., Eggleston et al., 1968;Hovland & Mitchell, 1973). Due to this, the characteristics of source regions, as well as the mechanisms that govern the failure and runout of lunar rockfall remain largely unknown.