Smith is an impact crater on Mars , located in the Mare Australe quadrangle at 66.1°S latitude and 102.9°W longitude. It measures 74.33 kilometers in diameter and was named after English geologist William Smith (1769–1839). The name was approved in 1973, by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature . [1]
Year | Metadata | Sections | Top Words | First Paragraph |
2018 |
72656 characters 2 sections 2 paragraphs 4 images 654 internal links 1 external links |
smith 0.517 1839 0.330 1769 0.330 102 0.273 geologist 0.239 australe 0.212 74 0.209 66 0.192 english 0.164 mare 0.163 william 0.153 33 0.149 nomenclature 0.135 1973 0.118 measures 0.115 |
Smith is an impact crater on Mars , located in the Mare Australe quadrangle at 66.1°S latitude and 102.9°W longitude. It measures 74.33 kilometers in diameter and was named after English geologist William Smith (1769–1839). The name was approved in 1973, by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature . [1] |
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2017 |
31284 characters 2 sections 2 paragraphs 7 images 158 internal links 1 external links |
smith 0.517 1839 0.330 1769 0.330 102 0.273 geologist 0.239 australe 0.212 74 0.209 66 0.192 english 0.164 mare 0.163 william 0.153 33 0.149 nomenclature 0.135 1973 0.118 measures 0.115 |
Smith is an impact crater on Mars , located in the Mare Australe quadrangle at 66.1°S latitude and 102.9°W longitude. It measures 74.33 kilometers in diameter and was named after English geologist William Smith (1769–1839). The name was approved in 1973, by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature . [1] |
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2015 |
5803 characters 2 sections 1 paragraphs 1 images 8 internal links 1 external links |
smith 0.520 1839 0.332 1769 0.332 102 0.275 geologist 0.240 australe 0.213 wgpsn 0.212 66 0.194 english 0.165 mare 0.164 william 0.154 75 0.148 nomenclature 0.135 1973 0.119 iau 0.114 |
Smith Crater is an impact crater in the Mare Australe quadrangle of Mars, located at 66.1°S latitude and 102.9°W longitude. It is 75.5 km in diameter and was named after William Smith (1769-1839), an English geologist, and the name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN). [1] |