November 17, 2004

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A Glorious Serpentine Ridge

LPOD-2004-11-17.jpeg

Image Credit: Bruno Daversin


A Glorious Serpentine Ridge

One of the most wondrous lunar sights can be observed when the Moon is 6 days old. Paralleling the eastern shore of Mare Serenitatis is the snakelike Serpentine Ridge. This fine name has been around since Schroeter (1790s), but the IAU, in their woeful ignorance of history and selenology, gave different parts of this obvious single structure two unnecessary names: Dorsum Smirnov and Dorsum Lister. Bruno Daversin's exquisite image reveals both the broad and detailed structure of this wrinkle ridge system. Mare ridges generally have a a wide swelling with one edge being steeper-sided and higher. This can be well seen near the crater Very (large crater near the upper left). From LTO 42B3 (1.6mb) we can see that the broad part of the ridge rises as much as 200 m over a horizontal distance of 4-5 km, but the steep part of the ridge rises 200 m higher in a distance of a little less than a kilometer. At the southern end of the ridge there is a strongly curved arc that looks almost like a crater rim. And unlike the rest of the ridge, this arc has its tall side on the eastern edge of the broad structure. I don't know what that means, but it is different. Near the top right corner of this scene (near the crater Borel) is a lower ridge system that may actually be a ghost crater - i.e. ridges marking a lava covered crater. Other images of the area show that the ridge continues as almost a full circle. In general, Serenitatis must be deep for few partially flooded craters exist there, but it makes since that this may be one because it is on the shallow outer bench of the mare.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details:
Sept 4, 2004. Ludiver Observatory 600 mm (24") Schmidt-Cassegrain & B&W webcam.

Related Links:
Ludiver Observatory
Rukl Atlas of the Moon, Sheet 24

Yesterday's LPOD: LTOs Are Here!

Tomorrow's LPOD: What's a Rukl?



Author & Editor:
Charles A. Wood

 


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