Discovery Rupes
Long cliff on Mercury
56°18′S 38°18′W / 56.3°S 38.3°W / -56.3; -38.3Discovery Rupes is an escarpment on Mercury approximately 650 kilometers (400 mi) long and 2 kilometres (6,562 ft) high, located at latitude 56.3 S and longitude 38.3 W. It was formed by a thrust fault, thought to have occurred due to the shrinkage of the planet's core as it cooled over time. The scarp cuts through Rameau crater. It was discovered by Mariner 10.
The rupes are named after HMS Discovery, the ship used by explorer James Cook on his third voyage.
- Discovery Rupes photographed during first Mariner 10 fly-by in 1974
- The scarp imaged by MESSENGER in 2012
- Representation of the thrust fault at Discovery Rupes
References
- "Discovery Rupes (Thrust Fault) Discovery Region, Mercury". The Solar System in 3-D. Lunar and Planetary Institute. Retrieved 2006-10-25.
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