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 | presentsFABRYFarside Directory - Ridge
                                Section  84
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        BRIEF DESCRIPTION
        
42.9_N_100.7_E_
        Ridge Section  84 is named after Fabry and contains
          the famous small crater, Giordano Bruno.  Fabry is a
          large lunar crater (walled plain) located on the lunar Far
          Side, just beyond the northeastern limb, but difficult to see
          in the our cropped image above. Parts of this area are
          sometimes brought into view on the Near Side by the effects of
          libration, but the terrain is seen from the edge and so not
          much in the way of detail can be observed. This formation is
          of significant dimensions in its own right, but it overlies
          the northeast rim of an even larger basin named Harkhebi. To
          the west is the crater Vashalakidze, and east of Fabry is the
          small crater Petrie. The best reference is the crater H.G.
          Wells located on the eastern edge of our frame. 
          Northwards lies Swann. The outer rim of Fabry is heavily worn
          and eroded, with notches from subsequent impacts.  There
          is a central peak formed from a long massif that covers nearly
          a quarter of the crater diameter from west to east. The
          remainder of the floor has been resurfaced, and now is marked
          only by tiny craterlets and the rough ground along the edge of
          the rim.  Ray material from the young crater Giordano
          Bruno to the south carries across the floor of Harkhebi, and
          lies in a few faint patches on the floor of Fabry. This is
          most notable in the southern part of the crater to the south
          of the small crater near the midpoint.
          
          Between Harkhebi and Szilard is the small Giordano Bruno,
          which is a 22 km lunar impact crater, just beyond the
          northeastern limb. At this location it lies in an area that
          can be viewed during a favorable libration, although at such
          times the area is viewed from the side and not much detail can
          be seen. When viewed from orbit, Giordano Bruno is at the
          center of a symmetrical ray system of ejecta that has a higher
          albedo than the surrounding surface. The ray material extends
          for over 150 kilometers and has not been significantly
          darkened by space erosion. Some of the ejecta appears to
          extend as far as the crater Boss, over 300 km to the
          northwest. The outer rim of the crater is especially bright,
          compared to its surroundings. To all appearances this is a
          young formation that was created in the relatively recent
          past, geologically speaking. The actual age is unknown, but is
          estimated to be less than 350 million years and was recently
          imaged by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter at an angle at a
          time when the setting sun cast long shadows, creating the
          high-relief image seen in this report. **  It’s known
          that the brightly-rayed crater is relatively young (see the
          video below) but how young? It could be anywhere from 834
          years old (if some Medieval accounts are to be accepted as
          accurate descriptions of the crater’s formation) to 2 to 4
          million years old, up to even 10 million years old, of which
          there would obviously be no written documentation. The
          bright-rayed crater was named Giordano Bruno by the Russians.
          Bruno was a sixteenth-century Italian scientist. 
          (Credit: Most of the information used in this section feature
          descriptions was obtained from wikipedia.org.  Section 84
          and this directory was created by Fran Ridge and Ned Haskin of
          The Lunascan Project).
        
        
                    
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