Pytheas F (Moon)

Satellite Feature of Pytheas

Named after Of Marseilles Pytheas - Greek navigator, geographer (c. 308 B.C.).

Pytheas is a small lunar impact crater located on the southern part of the Mare Imbrium, to the south of the crater Lambert. It has a sharply defined rim, a hummocky outer rampart, and an irregular interior due to slumping or fall-back. There is a small crater along the northern outer rampart, and a similar crater about 20 km to the west. The crater possesses a small ray system that extends for a radius of about 50 kilometers. (wikipedia entry)

NW 136 km

Pytheas A

MRV
2 Hours 7 Minutes
Walking
2 Days 13 Hours

N 28 km

Pytheas B

Walking
12 Hours 49 Minutes

NE 90 km

Pytheas L

MRV
1 Hour 24 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 17 Hours

W 3590 km

Lodygin(next)

MRV
2 Days 8 Hours
Walking
67 Days 23 Hours

Pytheas F

16.55° N 340.86° E

E 204 km

Eratosthenes C

MRV
3 Hours 12 Minutes
Walking
3 Days 21 Hours

SW 80 km

Gay-Lussac D

MRV
1 Hour 15 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 12 Hours

S 74 km

Gay-Lussac F

MRV
1 Hour 9 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 9 Hours

SE 93 km

Stadius M

MRV
1 Hour 28 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 18 Hours


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