Birmingham H (Moon)

Satellite Feature of Birmingham

Named after John Birmingham - Irish astronomer (1816-1884).

Birmingham is the surviving remnant of a lunar crater. All that survives of the original formation is an irregular perimeter of low, indented ridges surrounding the lava-resurfaced interior. The inner floor is marked by several tiny craterlets, and the surface is unusually rough for a walled plain. (wikipedia entry)

NW 2754 km

Lodygin(next)

MRV
1 Day 19 Hours
Walking
52 Days 3 Hours

N 19 km

Birmingham

Walking
8 Hours 58 Minutes

NE 12 km

Birmingham G

Walking
5 Hours 52 Minutes

W 200 km

Fontenelle P

MRV
3 Hours 8 Minutes
Walking
3 Days 19 Hours

Birmingham H

64.46° N 349.36° E

E 309 km

Timaeus

MRV
4 Hours 50 Minutes
Walking
5 Days 20 Hours

SW 274 km

Fontenelle G

MRV
4 Hours 17 Minutes
Walking
5 Days 4 Hours

S 33 km

Birmingham B

Walking
15 Hours 9 Minutes

SE 382 km

Plato H

MRV
5 Hours 58 Minutes
Walking
7 Days 5 Hours


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