March 23, 2010

From LPOD
Revision as of 18:21, 4 January 2015 by Api (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

A New Theory

LPOD-Mar23-10.jpg
image by " rel="nofollow Damian Peach, Barbados, W.I.

This image speaks for itself. Elger pointed out that Cassini is similar in character to Posidonius and he was right. Each crater has a low wall and is filled with a broad smooth floor. But there the similarities end, for Posidonius was radically transformed by the magma that invaded its underlying faults, lifted and tilted its floor, and snaked across the surface as a super sinuous rille. " rel="nofollow Posidonius is a classic floor-fractured crater. Cassini, like nearby Plato and Archimedes, had mare lava seep up its faults and quietly flood its floor but was not strongly affected. Or maybe it was. Possibly the elevated and rilled portion of the floor on the right is evidence of uplift and floor-fracturing. The large "washbowl" crater does look tilted, and maybe the higher elevation of the right side of its floor is due to the uplift. So perhaps Elger was more right than he knew - or I did - for just as only one side of Posidonius was uplifted, so was just one side of Cassini. It makes a good story - wonder if its true?

" rel="nofollow Chuck Wood
The original version of this LPOD had no identification of the imager. Thanks to Sam Whitby for identifying the image as one of Damian's.
Tuesday pm update: I am surprised there have been no comments on this LPOD because it is an explanation for a famous crater. What do you think of it?

Technical Details
May 26th, 2007. C14 with SKYnyx 2.0M

Related Links
Rükl plate 12
Image from Damian's " rel="nofollow website


You can support LPOD when you buy any book from Amazon thru " rel="nofollow LPOD!

COMMENTS?

Click on this icon File:PostIcon.jpg at the upper right to post a comment.