Dorsum Thera

Dorsum Thera is a wrinkle ridge at 24.4°N 31.4°W / 24.4; -31.4 in Mare Imbrium on the Moon. It is approximately 7 km long.

Dorsum Thera from Apollo 15 panoramic camera
Dorsum Thera is on the bottom left of the Lunar Orbiter 4 photo featuring other features in the area

NASA proposed the dorsum to be named in honour of Dr. Anthony Kontaratos' contribution to the space program (notably rescue of Apollo 13 mission). Nevertheless, Dr. Kontaratos asked for the dorsum to be named 'Thera', after his place of origin (Thera - also known as Santorini, Greece).[1] It was named in 1976.[2]

To the northeast are Courtney crater and Catena Yuri. To the southwest is Mons Vinogradov. The nearest prominent crater is Euler located to the south-southeast.


References

  1. NASA Greek rescues astronauts on the mission of Apollo 13 – Newsbeast, retrieved 2020-09-25.
  2. Dorsum Thera, Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature, International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN)
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