Mons Pico

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Mons Pico
File:Mons Pico 4122 h2.jpg
Mons Pico (upper left) and nearby unnamed mountain (lower right). Lunar Orbiter 4 image.
Highest point
Elevation 2.4 km
Listing Lunar mountains
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Geography
Location the Moon
File:Mons Pico AS15-M-1547 ASU.jpg
Oblique Apollo 15 image of Pico (left) and unnamed mountain (right). NASA/JSC/Arizona State University.
File:MonsPico lunar crater map.jpg
Region around Mons Pico with labeled satellite craters

Mons Pico is a solitary lunar mountain that lies in the northern part of the Mare Imbrium basin, and to the south of the dark-floored crater Plato. This peak forms part of the surviving inner ring of the Imbrium basin. This ring continues to the northwest and with the Montes Teneriffe and Montes Recti ranges, and probably to the southeast with the Montes Spitzbergen. This mountain feature was most likely named by Schröter for the Pico von Teneriffe (Teide).

The selenographic coordinates of this peak are 45.7° N, 8.9° W. It forms an elongated feature with a length of 25 kilometers (oriented northwest-southeast) and a width of 15 km. The peak rises to a height of only 2.4 km, comparable to the maximum altitude of the Montes Teneriffe. Due to its isolated location on the lunar mare, however, this peak can form prominent shadows when illuminated by oblique sunlight.

A smaller peak to the southeast of Mons Pico is unnamed. This region of the mare is notable for a number of wrinkle ridges.

Satellite craters

By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater midpoint that is closest to Mons Pico.

Pico Latitude Longitude Diameter
B 46.5° N 15.3° W 12 km
C 47.2° N 6.6° W 5 km
D 43.4° N 11.3° W 7 km
E 43.0° N 10.3° W 9 km
F 42.2° N 10.2° W 4 km
G 46.6° N 10.4° W 4 km
K 44.6° N 7.5° W 3 km

Pico in fiction

Strange objects appear near Pico in the 1957 science fiction novel Blast Off at Woomera by Hugh Walters; their fate is further expanded upon in the sequels The Domes of Pico and Operation Columbus.

Pico is the site of a climactic space battle in Arthur C. Clarke's novel Earthlight, and mentioned in passing in his novel 3001: The Final Odyssey and in his short story "The Sentinel" (in which Wilson, the protagonist, mentions having climbed it).

See also

External Links

  • LAC-25 Lunar Quadrangle Map with IAU feature names

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