Stadius S (Moon)

Satellite Feature of Stadius

Named after Stade, Jan Stadius - Belgian astronomer, mathematician (1527-1579).

Stadius is a ghostly remnant of an ancient lunar crater that has been nearly obliterated by basaltic lava flows. It lies to the southwest of the much younger crater Eratosthenes, at the north edge of Mare Insularum where the mare joins Sinus Aestuum. To the west is the prominent ray crater Copernicus, and multiple secondary craters from the Copernican ejecta cover this area. To the northwest is a chain of craters that continue in a roughly linear formation until reaching Mare Imbrium. (wikipedia entry)

NW 4 km

Stadius F

Walking
2 Hours 1 Minute

N 171 km

Pytheas L

MRV
2 Hours 40 Minutes
Walking
3 Days 5 Hours

NE 51 km

Eratosthenes Z

Walking
23 Hours 19 Minutes

W 3737 km

Lodygin(next)

MRV
2 Days 10 Hours
Walking
70 Days 18 Hours

Stadius S

12.9° N 344.42° E

E 101 km

Eratosthenes H

MRV
1 Hour 35 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 22 Hours

SW 140 km

Copernicus A

MRV
2 Hours 11 Minutes
Walking
2 Days 15 Hours

S 8 km

Stadius E

Walking
3 Hours 54 Minutes

SE 21 km

Stadius R

Walking
9 Hours 41 Minutes


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