List of quadrangles on Mars

The surface of Mars has been divided into thirty cartographic quadrangles by the United States Geological Survey. Each quadrangle is a region covering a specified range of latitudes and longitudes on the Martian surface. The quadrangles are named after classical albedo features, and they are numbered from one to thirty with the prefix "MC" (for "Mars Chart"),[1] with the numbering running from north to south and from west to east.

The quadrangles appear as rectangles on maps based on a cylindrical map projection,[1] but their actual shapes on the curved surface of Mars are more complicated Saccheri quadrilaterals. The sixteen equatorial quadrangles are the smallest, with surface areas of 4,500,000 square kilometres (1,700,000 sq mi) each, while the twelve mid-latitude quadrangles each cover 4,900,000 square kilometres (1,900,000 sq mi). The two polar quadrangles are the largest, with surface areas of 6,800,000 square kilometres (2,600,000 sq mi) each.[2][3]

History

In 1972, NASA's Mariner 9 mission returned thousands of photographs collectively covering more than 80% of the Martian surface. That year and the next, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory collaborated with the United States Geological Survey's Astrogeology Research Program to assemble Mariner's photographs into the first detailed photomosaic maps of Mars. To organize and subdivide this work, the USGS divided the planet's surface into thirty cartographic quadrangles, each named for classical albedo features within the respective regions, and the various quadrangles were assigned to geologists at USGS and at American universities for mapping and study.[4]

As continuing missions to Mars have made increasingly accurate maps available, the International Astronomical Union has assigned names to regions of the planet's surface that reflect its actual surface features and geology. These names are also broadly inspired by classical albedo features, with the result that they generally correspond to the names of the arbitrary USGS quadrangles, though larger IAU features frequently span multiple quadrangles.[2]

Quadrangles

The maps below were produced by the Mars Global Surveyor's Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter; redder colors indicate higher elevations. The maps of the equatorial quadrangles use a Mercator projection, while those of the mid-latitude quadrangles use a Lambert conformal conic projection, and the maps of the polar quadrangles use a polar stereographic projection.[1]

NumberNameLatitudesLongitudesFeaturesMap
MC-01Mare Boreum65–90° N180° W – 180° EFeatures
MC-02Diacria30–65° N120–180° WFeatures
MC-03Arcadia30–65° N60–120° WFeatures
MC-04Mare Acidalium30–65° N0–60° WFeatures
MC-05Ismenius Lacus30–65° N0–60° EFeatures
MC-06Casius30–65° N60–120° EFeatures
MC-07Cebrenia30–65° N120–180° EFeatures
MC-08Amazonis0–30° N135–180° WFeatures
MC-09Tharsis0–30° N90–135° WFeatures
MC-10Lunae Palus0–30° N45–90° WFeatures
MC-11Oxia Palus0–30° N0–45° WFeatures
MC-12Arabia0–30° N0–45° EFeatures
MC-13Syrtis Major0–30° N45–90° EFeatures
MC-14Amenthes0–30° N90–135° EFeatures
MC-15Elysium0–30° N135–180° EFeatures
MC-16Memnonia0–30° S135–180° WFeatures
MC-17Phoenicis Lacus0–30° S90–135° WFeatures
MC-18Coprates0–30° S45–90° WFeatures
MC-19Margaritifer Sinus0–30° S0–45° WFeatures
MC-20Sinus Sabaeus0–30° S0–45° EFeatures
MC-21Iapygia0–30° S45–90° EFeatures
MC-22Mare Tyrrhenum0–30° S90–135° EFeatures
MC-23Aeolis0–30° S135–180° EFeatures
MC-24Phaethontis30–65° S120–180° WFeatures
MC-25Thaumasia30–65° S60–120° WFeatures
MC-26Argyre30–65° S0–60° WFeatures
MC-27Noachis30–65° S0–60° EFeatures
MC-28Hellas30–65° S60–120° EFeatures
MC-29Eridania30–65° S120–180° EFeatures
MC-30Mare Australe65–90° S180° W – 180° EFeatures

See also

References

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