Erebus (crater)

This article is about the impact crater on Mars. For other uses, see Erebus (disambiguation).
Erebus
Planet Mars
Region Meridiani Planum
Coordinates 2°06′S 5°30′W / 2.1°S 5.5°W / -2.1; -5.5Coordinates: 2°06′S 5°30′W / 2.1°S 5.5°W / -2.1; -5.5
Diameter ~350 metres
Depth Effectively zero depth
Discoverer Opportunity rover
Eponym HMS Erebus
Erebus is located near the center of this satellite image.

Erebus is a crater lying situated within the Margaritifer Sinus quadrangle (MC-19) region of the planet Mars, this extraterrestrial geological feature was visited by the Opportunity rover on the way to the much larger crater Victoria. It is named after the polar exploration vessel HMS Erebus which was used by James Clark Ross in 1841 to discover the Great Ice Barrier, now known as the Ross Ice Shelf. The rover was in the immediate vicinity of the crater from approximately sol 550 to 750 (October 2005 to March 2006).

This crater features two other minor named outcrops on the edges of this topographical depression. These include Payson Ridge and Olympia Ridge (see gallery below).

Erebus is located roughly 2,500 meters south of the much smaller crater Vostok, which was previously visited by Opportunity. It is surrounded by what scientists are describing as "etched terrain", a region where rocks peek out from under the sand of Meridiani Planum.

Erebus is about 350 meters wide, twice as large as the crater Endurance. However, it is very old and eroded, and is barely visible from the ground; it appears merely as a number of flat rocky outcrops encircling a region of dunes.

See also

External links and further reading

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