Paracelsus

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Paracelsus

Lat: 23.0°S, Long: 163.1°E, Diam: 83 km, Depth: 4 km, Rükl: (farside)
external image normal_Paracelus_AS15-M-0085_LTVT.JPGexternal image normal_paracelsus-clem1.jpg
Left: Apollo 15 Right: Clementine

Images

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AS15-M-0282 shows bright craterlet Paracelsus N near the photograph's left margin. In it (in Paracelsus N) there's noticeable reflected light on its western inner shadowed slopes.
See also LAC 103 (page 206) in the Clementine Atlas of the Moon
Research Danny Caes.

Maps

(LAC zone 103B4) USGS Digital Atlas PDF LM map

Description


Description: Wikipedia

Paracelsus

Additional Information


Mystery at Paracelsus C

  • For orbital close-up photographs of the two odd objects on the southern part of the floor of Paracelsus C, visit the page Stratification.


Nomenclature

Paracelsus [Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombast von Hohenheim] (November 11, 1493 - September 24, 1541) was an alchemist, physician, astrologer, and general occultist. Paracelsus was sometimes called the father of toxicology. He said that substances often considered toxic can be benign or beneficial in small doses, and conversely an ordinarily benign substance like water can be deadly if over-consumed.
Rima Paracelsus M (see Vallis Alpha Reed below).

Vallis Alpha Reed

South-southeast of Paracelsus M (at the most northern part of the Ingenii Basin) runs a rille which was once unofficially known as Vallis Alpha Reed (this during the hey-days of NASA's Apollo project). Vallis Alpha Reed is mentioned in David Woods' and Frank O'Brien's Apollo 15 Flight Journal, at 81:15:41 GET in the mission.
The meaning (and origin) of "Alpha Reed " shall always be an unanswered question... (one of many).
See: http://bit.ly/2xK8nX2

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