Siton Undae is one of the largest and densest dune fields in the vicinity of Planum Boreum , the Martian northern polar ice-cap. [1] It is named after one of the classical albedo features on Mars . [2] Its name was officially approved by IAU on 20 March 2007. It extends from latitude 73.79°N to 77.5°N and from longitude 291.38°E to 301.4°E (43.98°W – 57.08°W). [2] Its centre is located at latitude 75.55°N, longitude 297.28E (62.72°W), and has a diameter of 222.97 kilometres (138.55 mi). [2]
Year | Metadata | Sections | Top Words | First Paragraph |
2018 |
84521 characters 4 sections 8 paragraphs 5 images 656 internal links 7 external links |
undae 0.632 siton 0.551 glass 0.148 theorised 0.134 boreum 0.110 coated 0.109 dune 0.103 hyperboreae 0.100 circumpolar 0.097 abalos 0.094 sand 0.089 silica 0.087 fields 0.087 dunes 0.078 sands 0.076 |
Siton Undae is one of the largest and densest dune fields in the vicinity of Planum Boreum , the Martian northern polar ice-cap. [1] It is named after one of the classical albedo features on Mars . [2] Its name was officially approved by IAU on 20 March 2007. It extends from latitude 73.79°N to 77.5°N and from longitude 291.38°E to 301.4°E (43.98°W – 57.08°W). [2] Its centre is located at latitude 75.55°N, longitude 297.28E (62.72°W), and has a diameter of 222.97 kilometres (138.55 mi). [2] |
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2017 |
42901 characters 4 sections 8 paragraphs 8 images 172 internal links 6 external links |
undae 0.632 siton 0.551 glass 0.148 theorised 0.134 boreum 0.110 coated 0.109 dune 0.103 hyperboreae 0.100 circumpolar 0.097 abalos 0.094 sand 0.089 silica 0.087 fields 0.087 dunes 0.078 sands 0.076 |
Siton Undae is one of the largest and densest dune fields in the vicinity of Planum Boreum , the Martian northern polar ice-cap. [1] It is named after one of the classical albedo features on Mars . [2] Its name was officially approved by IAU on 20 March 2007. It extends from latitude 73.79°N to 77.5°N and from longitude 291.38°E to 301.4°E (43.98°W – 57.08°W). [2] Its centre is located at latitude 75.55°N, longitude 297.28E (62.72°W), and has a diameter of 222.97 kilometres (138.55 mi). [2] |