Difference between revisions of "Mons Delisle"

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* Named after the nearby crater. ([[Delisle|Delisle]])
 
* Named after the nearby crater. ([[Delisle|Delisle]])
* In the original [[IAU%20Nomenclature|IAU Nomenclature]] of [[Blagg%20and%20M%C3%BCller|Blagg and Müller]] (1935), this peak was called '''[[Delisle|Delisle]] Beta''', a name which was retained in the ''[[System%20of%20Lunar%20Craters|System of Lunar Craters]]'' (although it does not appear on [http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/mapcatalog/LAC/lac39/ LAC 39].
+
* In the original [[IAU%20nomenclature|IAU Nomenclature]] of [[Blagg%20and%20M%C3%BCller|Blagg and Müller]] (1935), this peak was called '''[[Delisle|Delisle]] Beta''', a name which was retained in the ''[[System%20of%20Lunar%20Craters|System of Lunar Craters]]'' (although it does not appear on [http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/mapcatalog/LAC/lac39/ LAC 39].
 
* In 1973 the [[IAU|IAU]] dropped all the former Greek-lettered peak names, preserving only a very few with new latinized names ([[IAU%20Transactions%20XVB|IAU Transactions XVB]]).
 
* In 1973 the [[IAU|IAU]] dropped all the former Greek-lettered peak names, preserving only a very few with new latinized names ([[IAU%20Transactions%20XVB|IAU Transactions XVB]]).
 
* The name '''Mons Delisle''', presumbably meant to reinstate the feature formerly known as '''[[Delisle|Delisle]] Beta''', was not approved until 1985 ([[IAU%20Transactions%20XIXB|IAU Transactions XIXB]]).
 
* The name '''Mons Delisle''', presumbably meant to reinstate the feature formerly known as '''[[Delisle|Delisle]] Beta''', was not approved until 1985 ([[IAU%20Transactions%20XIXB|IAU Transactions XIXB]]).

Latest revision as of 19:38, 18 April 2018

Mons Delisle

(formerly Delisle Beta)

Lat: 29.5°N, Long: 35.8°W, Diam: 30 km, Height: 1.0 km, Rükl: 19

external image normal_Mons_Delisle_AS15-M-2332_LTVT.JPG
Apollo 15 AS15-M2332 Mons Delisle is the club-shaped mountain. The crater in the upper right is Delisle, and a portion of Rima Diophantus is visible at bottom right.
Note the curious Bottle/ Guitar near the photograph's lower left corner (halfway between Mons Delisle and Fedorov). - DannyCaes Oct 17, 2015

Images

LPOD Photo Gallery Lunar Orbiter Images Apollo Images (no match found for 'Mons Delisle', see lower part of Apollo photographs for Delisle, at Delisle Beta and Delisle Beta Prominence).

Maps

(LAC zone 39B1) LAC map Geologic map LM map LTO map

Description


Description: Elger

(IAU directions) Delisle Beta. A curious club-shaped mountain on the S.W. of Delisle, nearly 4,000 feet in height.

Description: Wikipedia

Mons Delisle

Additional Information

  • From the shadows in AS15-M-2332, the spine of Mons Delisle is around 600-1000 m tall.
  • Measures on LRO QuickMap show highest part of ridge and of broader mass slightly more than 1 km high.


Nomenclature

Mons_Delisle-Baby_CLA-Plate-C22_LTVT.JPG

The Baby


  • Gerard Kuiper called this The Baby because, with a telescopic south up view and normal resolution, it looks like a big-headed child crawling southward (see image at right: Mons Delisle at a sun angle of about +0.6° from the east, as seen in Plate C22 of the Consolidated Lunar Atlas. Rotated so south is to the left and east up.)
  • Danny Caes calls the northern part of Mons Delisle "a mermaid's lower half, above the water" or "Fish's Tail".
  • In his informal 1953 tour of Mare Imbrium, Leland Copeland referred to Mons Delisle as the The Torch. Delisle Alpha (a peak to the northwest of Mons Delisle) was nicknamed The Triangle, while the elevation running from Mons Delisle to Diophantus was nicknamed The Wall. Research: Danny Caes.
  • An interesting photograph of both Mons Delisle and crater Delisle is included in Apollo Over The Moon: A View From Orbit, Chapter 6: Rimae (Part 2: Sinuous Rimae), Figure 199.
  • I still need a nickname for the odd cluster of craterlets west of Mons Delisle (an interesting test-object for common and large telescopes!). - DannyCaes Jan 2, 2017


LPOD Articles

Dark Mare, Bright Rims
The Baby and the Skull

Bibliography

Harold Hill. A Portfolio of Lunar Drawings, pages 72, 73.