Wallace is an impact crater in the Hellas quadrangle on Mars at 52.9°S and 249.4°W and is 173.0 km in diameter, and is inside Promethei Terra . Its name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN), and it was named after Alfred Russel Wallace . [1]
Year | Metadata | Sections | Top Words | First Paragraph |
2018 |
77045 characters 2 sections 4 paragraphs 6 images 660 internal links 2 external links |
wallace 0.372 domninate 0.275 unnamed 0.248 priestley 0.233 249 0.221 haldane 0.221 tikhov 0.221 russel 0.221 tolstoy 0.221 overlaps 0.206 alexey 0.200 promethei 0.190 alfred 0.182 secchi 0.179 173 0.165 |
Wallace is an impact crater in the Hellas quadrangle on Mars at 52.9°S and 249.4°W and is 173.0 km in diameter, and is inside Promethei Terra . Its name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN), and it was named after Alfred Russel Wallace . [1] |
|
2017 |
35679 characters 2 sections 4 paragraphs 9 images 169 internal links 2 external links |
wallace 0.372 domninate 0.275 unnamed 0.248 priestley 0.233 249 0.221 haldane 0.221 tikhov 0.221 russel 0.221 tolstoy 0.221 overlaps 0.206 alexey 0.200 promethei 0.190 alfred 0.182 secchi 0.179 173 0.165 |
Wallace is an impact crater in the Hellas quadrangle on Mars at 52.9°S and 249.4°W and is 173.0 km in diameter, and is inside Promethei Terra . Its name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN), and it was named after Alfred Russel Wallace . [1] |
|
2015 |
31163 characters 2 sections 2 paragraphs 8 images 155 internal links 1 external links |
wallace 0.596 249 0.355 russel 0.355 alfred 0.292 173 0.265 wgpsn 0.210 52 0.182 hellas 0.174 nomenclature 0.134 1973 0.118 iau 0.113 working 0.108 approved 0.108 astronomical 0.094 union 0.092 |
Wallace Crater is an impact crater in the Hellas quadrangle on Mars at 52.9°S and 249.4°W and is 173.0 km in diameter. Its name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN), and it was named after Alfred Russel Wallace . [1] |