Wrottesley A (Moon)

Satellite Feature of Wrottesley

Named after John, Baron Wrottesley - British astronomer (1798-1867).

Wrottesley is a lunar impact crater that is attached to the west-northwestern rim of the larger crater Petavius, and lies along the southeast edge of Mare Fecunditatis. It lies in the southeast part of the moon and appears somewhat foreshortened when viewed from the earth. This crater is generally circular in shape, with a slight outward bulge to the south and a system of terraces lining the inner walls. The outer wall has a moderate rampart which merges with that of the neighboring Petavius along the southeastern half. (wikipedia entry)

NW 76 km

Cook D

MRV
1 Hour 11 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 10 Hours

N 89 km

Cook E

MRV
1 Hour 23 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 16 Hours

NE 88 km

Petavius B

MRV
1 Hour 22 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 16 Hours

W 117 km

Biot

MRV
1 Hour 50 Minutes
Walking
2 Days 5 Hours

Wrottesley A

-23.57° N 54.93° E

E 51 km

Wrottesley

Walking
23 Hours 25 Minutes

SW 91 km

Snellius Y

MRV
1 Hour 25 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 17 Hours

S 66 km

Snellius X

MRV
1 Hour 2 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 6 Hours

SE 4786 km

Lodygin(next)

MRV
3 Days 2 Hours
Walking
90 Days 14 Hours


Built by Inkleby based on data from the Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature.
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