Siton Undae

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]

Page Revisions

Year Metadata Sections Top Words First Paragraph
2018

84521 characters

4 sections

8 paragraphs

5 images

656 internal links

7 external links

1. Dune characteristics

2. Images from THEMIS

3. See also

4. References

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]

2017

42901 characters

4 sections

8 paragraphs

8 images

172 internal links

6 external links

1. Dune characteristics

2. Images from THEMIS

3. See also

4. References

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]