Seneca F (Moon)

Satellite Feature of Seneca

Named after Lucius Annaeus Seneca - Roman philosopher, natural scientist (4 B.C.- A.D. 65).

Seneca is a lunar crater that is located towards the east-northeastern limb, less than one crater diameter to the north of Plutarch. To the northwest is the crater Hahn, and due north lies the large walled plain Gauss. This crater has been heavily eroded by impacts, with an outer rim that has been distorted and overlain by several small craters. It appears roughly diamond-shaped as viewed from above, although it is heavily foreshortened when seen from the Earth. (wikipedia entry)

NW 91 km

Gauss G

MRV
1 Hour 25 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 17 Hours

N 29 km

Gauss B

Walking
13 Hours 20 Minutes

NE 116 km

Rayleigh C

MRV
1 Hour 49 Minutes
Walking
2 Days 4 Hours

W 67 km

Seneca E

MRV
1 Hour 3 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 6 Hours

Seneca F

29.63° N 81.93° E

E 3895 km

Lodygin(next)

MRV
2 Days 12 Hours
Walking
73 Days 18 Hours

SW 65 km

Seneca

MRV
1 Hour 1 Minute
Walking
1 Day 5 Hours

S 23 km

Seneca D

Walking
10 Hours 35 Minutes

SE 152 km

Hubble

MRV
2 Hours 22 Minutes
Walking
2 Days 21 Hours


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