Chandler

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Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)

Lat: 43.63°N, Long: 171.65°E, Diam: 88.6 km, Depth: km, Rükl: (farside), [/Stratigraphy pre-Nectarian]

external image normal_chandler-large.jpg

chandler-color.jpg

Left: Annotated Clementine image from PDS Map-A-Planet. Right: Color-coded Lac 32 image from [/USGS%20Digital%20Atlas USGS Digital Atlas]

Table of Contents

[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds) Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)]
[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)-Images Images]
[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)-Maps Maps]
[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)-Description Description]
[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)-Description-Wikipedia Wikipedia]
[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)-Additional Information Additional Information]
[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)-Highland Ponds near Chandler Highland Ponds near Chandler]
[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)-Nomenclature Nomenclature]
[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)-LPOD Articles LPOD Articles]
[#Chandler (and nearby Highland Ponds)-Bibliography Bibliography]

Images

LPOD Photo Gallery Lunar Orbiter Images Apollo Images

Maps

([/LAC%20zone LAC zone] 32B4) USGS Digital Atlas PDF

Description

Chandler, to all intents and purposes, is a crater 'that is that was' -- just look at the Clementine image above and one would find it very hard to distinguish any semblence of a crater existing at all. There is one there, however, amidst all the numerous small and large impacts which has, virtually, eliminated nearly all its rim -- particularly in its south and south-western regions, along with its floor that has been altered beyond relief. The crater, thus, is very hard to see in any image or representation, however, it might well be worth mentioning that [/D%27Alembert D'Alembert] -- a [/Stratigraphy Nectarian] aged crater lying some 200 km off to Chandler's north-west -- may be responsible, in part, for its elusive appearance; covering portions of the crater with an ejecta blanket.- JohnMoore2 JohnMoore2

Wikipedia

Chandler

Additional Information


Highland Ponds near Chandler

Strange as it is, there seems to be only one location of (so-called) Highland Ponds on the moon, but... unfortunately it's on the farside (LAC 32: west-southwest of Chandler, east-southeast of Langevin, northeast of Golovin, north-northwest of Hutton) (about halfway between Chandler and Golovin) (nearer to Chandler than to Golovin or Langevin, which means it should receive the name Chandler Highland Ponds instead of just "Highland Ponds"). - DannyCaes DannyCaes Jun 17, 2016
See also: Highland Ponds low-sun controlled NAC mosaic (LROC RDR Products pages).
Some of these clusters of highland ponds look like miniature versions of Mare Australe. - DannyCaes DannyCaes Feb 18, 2018

Nomenclature

Seth Carlo Chandler; American astronomer (1846-1913).
Chandler Highland Ponds (an unofficial name from D.Caes for the small region of (so-called) Highland Ponds west-southwest of Chandler).
The floor of the officially unnamed crater west of Chandler (at Latitude 42.00 / Longitude 166.00) also contains several highland ponds. Why doesn't this crater have a name or official letter designation? It is a good and recognizable location to start one's own exploration of the multitude of highland ponds in this region.

LPOD Articles


Bibliography




[/Alphabetical%20Index Named Features] -- Prev: [/Champollion Champollion] -- Next: [/Chang%20Heng Chang Heng]


This page has been edited 1 times. The last modification was made by - tychocrater tychocrater on Jun 13, 2009 3:24 pm - afx3u3