Seventeen positive relief features similar to 45-150 m across are identified as probable blocks in Galileo high-resolution images of Ida, Their presence provides direct evidence for regolith retention on asteroids, The spatial distribution, maximum size, and integrated volume of the blocks are consistent with those of blocks associated with craters on the Earth, the Moon, Phobos, and Deimos, The concordance suggests that the features are impact ejecta fragments and that cratering mechanics on Ida, an object of average diameter similar to 32 km, are similar to those applying on previously studied rocky bodies. The blocks that lie within or near the rims of craters Lascaux and Mammoth were likely mobilized in the low-velocity tail portion of the excavation flow that formed those craters. A few blocks located near smaller craters may have migrated some distance away from their source, possibly by impact-induced spallation, hopping, rolling, and/or sliding, Some blocks on Ida could be surviving fragments from the Koronis parent body, accreted after its breakup. The lifetime of 10(2)-m sized boulders against collisional disruption is estimated to be in the 10(8)-10(9) year range, consistent with ages considered for the largest and oldest craters on Ida, Extrapolation of successful ejecta scaling laws to other asteroids suggests that blocks similar to 15 and 70 m across could be present on Dactyl and Gaspra, respectively (in both cases too small to be identified in available Galileo images), Blocks 100 m in size could be present on 433 Eros, and km-sized megablocks on 4 Vesta. (C) 1996 Academic Press, Inc.