{ "title": "Wonderfully Strange", "authors": "HiRISE", "metadata": { "thumbnailURL": "https://static.uahirise.org/anews/2020-03-26/ESP_017787_2250.jpg", "excerpt": "The landscape here, to the northeast of Nier Crater, is definitely otherworldly." }, "version": "1.5", "identifier": "ESP_017787_2250", "language": "en", "layout": { "columns": 10, "width": 1024, "margin": 85, "gutter": 20 }, "documentStyle": { "backgroundColor": "#faf7f2" }, "components": [ { "role": "heading1", "layout": "heading1Layout", "text": "HiPOD: 26 MARCH 2020" }, { "role": "divider", "layout": "bigDividerLayout", "stroke": { "width": 3, "color": "#8c2028" } }, { "role": "title", "layout": "halfMarginBelowLayout", "text": "Wonderfully Strange" }, { "role": "photo", "layout": "fullBleedLayout", "caption": "Less than 5 km across. (NASA/JPL/UArizona)", "URL": "https://static.uahirise.org/anews/2020-03-26/ESP_017787_2250.jpg" }, { "role": "body", "format": "html", "layout": "hipodMarginLayout", "text": "
The landscape here, to the northeast of Nier Crater, is definitely otherworldly. There are what appear to be many scalloped features and perhaps also indications of glacial flow. Our observation contains part of the ejecta of Nier Crater, along with adjacent terrain, located in Acidalia Planitia, in the Northern Hemisphere of Mars.
The crater is named for Alfred O.C. Nier, an American physicist who pioneered the development of mass spectrometry.
Below is a non-narrated HiClip mini, with added sound effect. (Less than 5 km across.)
ID: ESP_017787_2250
date: 13 May 2010
altitude: 300 km
NASA/JPL/UArizona