July 28, 2014
Quantified Mountain
image by " rel="nofollow Jocelyn Serot, France
Ten years ago I " rel="nofollow proposed that a large comical hill south of the simple crater Gardner was a new type of feature, a megadome - a large volcanic mountain that even had a summit depression, perhaps a caldera. Now, thanks to the ease of making topographic transects with QuickMap we can quantify that interpretation. This cross-section goes from the upper left of the megadome diagonally towards the mid-right side, passing through the summit caldera. The mountain is about 100 km across and nearly 1.4 km high. This cross-section suggests a steep mountain but the vertical exaggeration is about 100 to 1, so this a gentle dome. The central depression is about 13 km wide, and it is roughly 150 m deep. In fact, it looks likely that there are at least two calderas, the center one just measured and another one to the north with a well-defined curved eastern rim. If this truly is a volcanic mountain, it is probably a large ["https://lpod.wikispaces.com/January+28%2C+2011" shield] volcano, comparable in width to the island of Hawaii.
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