Odin Planitia

Geologic basin on Mercury
Crater on Mercury
23°18′N 171°36′W / 23.3°N 171.6°W / 23.3; -171.6QuadrangleShakespeareEponymOdin
Central Odin Planitia

Odin Planitia is a large basin on Mercury. It was named after the Norse god Odin in 1976 by the IAU.[1] It was first observed in detail by Mariner 10.[2][3] The plain is approximately 473 kilometers in diameter.

A large volcanic dome 7 km in diameter and 1.4 km high is situated near the center of Odin.[4]

Odin Planitia is located east of the Caloris basin. The southern portion is mapped on the Tolstoj quadrangle, and the northern portion is on the Shakespeare quadrangle.

Odin Planitia is one of four named plains that surround the Caloris basin (with Mearcair Planitia, Stilbon Planitia, and Tir Planitia). All of these plains are classified as smooth, as opposed to intracrater plains which have rougher topography. They also contain areas where kilometer-scale knobs protrude above the plains, and these areas are called the Odin Formation. The Odin Formation is interpreted as a mixture of impact melt and blocky basin ejecta, formed by the Caloris impact event.[5]

References

  1. ^ Odin Planitia, Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature, International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN)
  2. ^ SHADED RELIEF MAP OF THE TOLSTOJ QUADRANGLE OF MERCURY, Atlas of Mercury, NASA Special Publication 432, 1978.
  3. ^ SHADED RELIEF MAP OF THE SHAKESPEARE QUADRANGLE OF MERCURY , Atlas of Mercury, NASA Special Publication 432, 1978.
  4. ^ Katterfeld, G.N. Volcanism on Mercury. Bulletin of Volcanology 47, 531–535 (1984). doi.org/10.1007/BF01961224
  5. ^ Denevi, B. W., Earnst, C. M., Prockter, L. M., and Robinson, M. S., 2018. The Geologic History of Mercury. In Mercury: The View After MESSENGER edited by Sean C. Solomon, Larry R. Nittler, and Brian J. Anderson. Cambridge Planetary Science. Section 6.3.3.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Mercury
  • Outline
Geography
General
Regions
Quadrangles
Mountains and
volcanoes
Plains and
plateaus
Canyons and
valleys
Ridges and
rupes
Basins and
fossae
Craters
  • Abedin
  • Abu Nuwas
  • Africanus Horton
  • Ahmad Baba
  • Ailey
  • Aksakov
  • Akutagawa
  • Al-Akhtal
  • Alencar
  • Al-Hamadhani
  • Al-Jāhiz
  • Alver
  • Amaral
  • Amru Al-Qays
  • Andal
  • Aneirin
  • Angelou
  • Anguissola
  • Anyte
  • Apollodorus
  • Aristoxenes
  • Aśvaghoṣa
  • Atget
  • Bach
  • Balagtas
  • Balanchine
  • Baranauskas
  • Balzac
  • Bartók
  • Barma
  • Bashō
  • Beckett
  • Beethoven
  • Bek
  • Belinskij
  • Bello
  • Benoit
  • Berkel
  • Bernini
  • Bjornson
  • Boccaccio
  • Boethius
  • Botticelli
  • Brahms
  • Bramante
  • Brontë
  • Bruegel
  • Brunelleschi
  • Burns
  • Byron
  • Callicrates
  • Camoes
  • Carducci
  • Carolan
  • Calvino
  • Cervantes
  • Cézanne
  • Chaikovskij
  • Chao Meng-Fu
  • Chekov
  • Chiang Kʻui
  • Chŏng Chʼŏl
  • Chopin
  • Chu Ta
  • Coleridge
  • Copland
  • Copley
  • Couperin
  • Cunningham
  • Dali
  • Dario
  • De Graft
  • Debussy
  • Degas
  • Delacroix
  • Derain
  • Derzhavin
  • Desprez
  • Dickens
  • Dominici
  • Donne
  • Dostoevskij
  • Dowland
  • Durer
  • Dvorak
  • Eastman
  • Eitoku
  • Eminescu
  • Enheduanna
  • Enwonwu
  • Equiano
  • Faulkner
  • Fet
  • Firdousi
  • Flaubert
  • Flaiano
  • Futabatei
  • Gainsborough
  • Gauguin
  • Geddes
  • Ghiberti
  • Gibran
  • Giotto
  • Glinka
  • Gluck
  • Goethe
  • Gogol
  • Goya
  • Grieg
  • Guido d'Arezzo
  • Hals
  • Han Kan
  • Handel
  • Harunobu
  • Hauptmann
  • Hawthorne
  • Haydn
  • Heine
  • Hemingway
  • Hesiod
  • Hiroshige
  • Hitomaro
  • Hodgkins
  • Hokusai
  • Holbein
  • Holberg
  • Holst
  • Homer
  • Horace
  • Hovnatanian
  • Hugo
  • Hun Kal
  • Hurley
  • Ibsen
  • Ictinus
  • Imhotep
  • Ives
  • Izquierdo
  • Janáček
  • Jokai
  • Judah Ha-Levi
  • Kalidasa
  • Karsh
  • Keats
  • Kenko
  • Kertész
  • Khansa
  • Kipling
  • Kōshō
  • Kuan Han-Chʻing
  • Kuiper
  • Kulthum
  • Kunisada
  • Kurosawa
  • Lange
  • Larrocha
  • Leopardi
  • Lermontov
  • Lessing
  • Li Chʻing-Chao
  • Li Po
  • Liang Kʻai
  • Liszt
  • Lovecraft
  • Lu Hsun
  • Lysippus
  • Ma Chih-Yuan
  • Machaut
  • Mahler
  • Mansart
  • Mansur
  • March
  • Mark Twain
  • Martí
  • Martial
  • Matabei
  • Matisse
  • Melville
  • Mena
  • Mendes Pinto
  • Michelangelo
  • Mickiewicz
  • Milton
  • Mistral
  • Mofolo
  • Molière
  • Monet
  • Monteverdi
  • Moody
  • Mozart
  • Munch
  • Munkácsy
  • Murasaki
  • Mussorgskij
  • Myron
  • Nabokov
  • Nampeyo
  • Navoi
  • Nawahi
  • Neruda
  • Nureyev
  • Nervo
  • Neumann
  • Nizami
  • Okyo
  • Oskison
  • Ovid
  • Petrarch
  • Phidias
  • Picasso
  • Poe
  • Polygnotus
  • Praxiteles
  • Prokofiev
  • Qi Baishi
  • Rachmaninoff
  • Raden Saleh
  • Raditladi
  • Rameau
  • Raphael
  • Rembrandt
  • Renoir
  • Rivera
  • Rizal
  • Rodin
  • Rudaki
  • Sander
  • Scarlatti
  • Schubert
  • Shakespeare
  • Sholem Aleichem
  • Sinan
  • Stravinsky
  • Sullivan
  • Sveinsdóttir
  • Titian
  • To Ngoc Van
  • Tolstoj
  • Velázquez
  • Verdi
  • Villa-Lobos
  • Vivaldi
  • Vyasa
  • Xiao Zhao
  • Yeats
  • Zola
Other
MoonsAstronomy
Transits
Asteroids
Exploration
Current
and past
Proposed
See also
Related
  • Category
  • Portal
Stub icon

This article about the planet Mercury is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e
Stub icon

This article about an extraterrestrial geological feature is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e