First Global Geologic Map of Titan

nivek

As Above So Below
The first global geologic map of Saturn's largest moon, Titan, is based on radar and visible and infrared images from NASA's Cassini mission, which orbited Saturn from 2004 to 2017.

Black lines mark 30 degrees of latitude and longitude. Map is in Mollweide projection, a global view that attempts to minimize the size or area distortion, especially at the poles (although shapes are increasingly distorted away from the center of the map). It is centered on 0 degrees latitude, 180 degrees longitude. Map scale is 1:20,000,000.

In the annotated figure, the map is labeled with several of the named surface features. Also located is the landing site of the European Space Agency's (ESA) Huygens Probe, part of NASA's Cassini mission.

The map legend colors represent the broad types of geologic units found on Titan: plains (broad, relatively flat regions), labyrinth (tectonically disrupted regions often containing fluvial channels), hummocky (hilly, with some mountains), dunes (mostly linear dunes, produced by winds in Titan's atmosphere), craters (formed by impacts) and lakes (regions now or previously filled with liquid methane or ethane). Titan is the only planetary body in our solar system other than Earth known to have stable liquid on its surface — methane and ethane.

The map was developed using Cassini radar data and Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS) images.

(click map to enlarge)

PIA23174_fig1.jpg
 

Dejan Corovic

As above, so bellow
It's interesting that it has dunes. But they must be soggy dunes, because it's covered with heavy clouds that constantly rein ammonia.
 

nivek

As Above So Below
It's interesting that it has dunes. But they must be soggy dunes, because it's covered with heavy clouds that constantly rein ammonia.

I expected to see more lakes, the early indications were of many lakes and rivers of methane or ammonia?...

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