Difference between revisions of "Oriani"

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  Previously suspected crater near [http://the-moon.us/wiki/Eimmart Eimmart], [http://the-moon.us/wiki/Seneca Seneca] and [http://the-moon.us/wiki/Plutarch Plutarch].<br /> <br />  
 
  Previously suspected crater near [http://the-moon.us/wiki/Eimmart Eimmart], [http://the-moon.us/wiki/Seneca Seneca] and [http://the-moon.us/wiki/Plutarch Plutarch].<br /> <br />  
 
==Description: Elger==
 
==Description: Elger==
''([http://the-moon.us/wiki/IAU%20Directions IAU Directions])'' ORIANI.--An irregular object, 32 miles in diameter, somewhat difficult to identify, N.E. of [http://the-moon.us/wiki/EIMMART EIMMART]. There is a conspicuous crater on the N. of it, with which it is connected by a prominent ridge.<br /> <br />  
+
''([http://the-moon.us/wiki/IAU%20directions IAU Directions])'' ORIANI.--An irregular object, 32 miles in diameter, somewhat difficult to identify, N.E. of [http://the-moon.us/wiki/EIMMART EIMMART]. There is a conspicuous crater on the N. of it, with which it is connected by a prominent ridge.<br /> <br />  
 
==Additional Information==
 
==Additional Information==
 
* The position and diameter given in the title line are from ''[http://the-moon.us/wiki/Named%20Lunar%20Formations Named Lunar Formations]'' (1935).
 
* The position and diameter given in the title line are from ''[http://the-moon.us/wiki/Named%20Lunar%20Formations Named Lunar Formations]'' (1935).

Latest revision as of 02:08, 16 April 2018

Oriani

(discontinued IAU name)

Lat: 25.8°N, Long: 76.6°E, Diameter: 30 km, Depth: km, Rukl: 27

Oriani.jpg
LROC . The image shows the region inmediately west of Plutarch ( right edge) where Oriani was described. It is not clear for which one of several ill-defined circular features was it named.

Images

LPOD Photo GalleryLunar Orbiter Images

Maps

(LAC zone 45A3) USGS Digital Atlas PDF

Description

Previously suspected crater near Eimmart, Seneca and Plutarch.

Description: Elger

(IAU Directions) ORIANI.--An irregular object, 32 miles in diameter, somewhat difficult to identify, N.E. of EIMMART. There is a conspicuous crater on the N. of it, with which it is connected by a prominent ridge.

Additional Information


Nomenclature

  • Named for Barnaba Oriani, an Italian priest, geodesist, astronomer, and scientist (1752-1832). Discovered Messier 61.
  • The name was introduced by Johann Heinrich Mädler.
  • Oriani appears as Catalog Number 28 in Mary Blagg's Collated List (1913) and was part of the original IAU nomenclature of Blagg and Müller (1935), where it had two satellite craters (Oriani A and E) and two peaks (Oriani Alpha and Beta) assigned to it. Blagg noted that Schmidt mapped the craters in this region more to the south than Mädler or Neison, but believed he used most of the names (including this one) for the same features (Collated List, p. 169).
  • The name was deleted by Kuiper in Table III of his Photographic Lunar Atlas (1960), and his change was adopted by the IAU in 1961 (IAU Transactions XIB).
  • Note: the name Oriani is still printed on some of the modern moonmaps, such as the Hallwag moonmap and others.


LPOD Articles

Map showing location

Bibliography

E.A.Whitaker: Mapping and Naming the Moon (Cambridge, 1999).