NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter HiRISE Imagery Release 6 February 2008

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Onboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, the HiRISE camera offers unprecedented image quality, giving us a view of the Red Planet in a way never before seen. It’s the most powerful camera ever to leave Earth’s orbit.
Steve Halla’s class at Leap Academy Charter High School in Camden, NJ, suggested this image, a region near the intersection of Elysium Chasma and Hyblaeus Chasma. The class suggested that seeing a cross-section of Hyblaeus Chasma in the walls of Elysium Chasma might shed light on the mechanism(s) that formed it.
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Terby Crater As a possible landing site for the Mars Science Laboratory, Terby Crater was blasted into the northern rim of the gargantuan Hellas Basin by either an asteroid or comet impact. |
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Textured Surface in the Southern Part of Trumpler Crater The surface is mantled by a deposit that is postulated to be largely a mix of dust and ice. |
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Small Cones North of Olympus Mons Cones similar to these are found atop the freshest lava flows on Mars in Athabasca Valles. |
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Wrinkle Ridge in Solis Planum This ridge is located in the Thaumasia region of Mars, a high-elevation volcanic plain located south of Valles Marineris. |
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HiRISE Student Image of the Week: Intersection of Hyblaeus and Elysium Chasmata Steve Halla’s class at Leap Academy Charter High School in Camden, NJ, suggested this image, a region near the intersection of Elysium Chasma and Hyblaeus Chasma. |