Difference between revisions of "December 22, 2007"

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<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[December 21, 2007|East of the Pole]] </p>
 
<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[December 21, 2007|East of the Pole]] </p>
 
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[December 23, 2007|The Coming Lunar Name-Rush]] </p>
 
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[December 23, 2007|The Coming Lunar Name-Rush]] </p>
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Latest revision as of 00:08, 9 February 2015

Unnecessary Mystery

Gassendi-5-177_medLPOD.jpg
Lunar Orbiter V-177M image fromLPI Lunar Orbiter Photo Gallery

For decades I have wondered how mare lava got onto the southernmost floor of Gassendi. Like Fracastorius, Gassendi was formed on a tilted basin floor. Mare Nectaris overflowed the low rim of Fracastorius, leaving a lava-filled breached crater. At Humorum, the flooding did not quite overtop the low southern rim of Gassendi, but there is essentially identical mare material inside and outside the rim. From terrestrial images it often seems that small shadows suggest that the rim may have a narrow pass that allowed Humorum lavas to pour in. But this Lunar Orbiter V image from 40 years ago, which I don’t remember ever seeing, shows that the rim is unbroken - the lavas did not flow into Gassendi from Mare Humorum. Fractures created by the impact that formed Gassendi must have provided the conduits that allowed magma generated at depth - probably in the same magma chamber that fed Mare Humorum - to rise upward and erupt onto the crater’s floor.

Chuck Wood

Related Links:
Rükl plate 52

Yesterday's LPOD: East of the Pole

Tomorrow's LPOD: The Coming Lunar Name-Rush


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