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==References== |
==References== |
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*{{cite journal | author=Jeff Kargel and Stefania Poxio | title=The Volcanic and Tectonic History of Enceladus | journal=Icarus | year=1996 | volume=119 | pages=385–404 | doi=10.1006/icar.1996.0026}} |
*{{cite journal | author=Jeff Kargel and Stefania Poxio | title=The Volcanic and Tectonic History of Enceladus | journal=Icarus | year=1996 | volume=119 | pages=385–404 | doi=10.1006/icar.1996.0026 | issue=2}} |
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*{{cite book | author=Rothery, David A. | title=Satellites of the Outer Planets: Worlds in their own right | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1999 | isbn=0-19-512555-X}} |
*{{cite book | author=Rothery, David A. | title=Satellites of the Outer Planets: Worlds in their own right | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1999 | isbn=0-19-512555-X}} |
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Daryabar Fossa is an east-west trending troughonSaturn's moon Enceladus. Daryabar Fossa was first seen in Voyager 2 images, though a small section was see at much higher resolution by Cassini. It is centered at 9.7° North Latitude, 359.1° West Longitude and is approximately 201 kilometers long. Based on limb profiles of Voyager 2 images, Daryabar Fossa was determined to be a 400-meter deep and 4 kilometers wide (Kargel and Pozio 1996). Daryabar Fossa runs perpendicular to the scarp Isbanir Fossa and is right-laterally offset 15–20 km by the scarp, suggesting Isbanir is a strike-sliportransform fault (Rothery 1999).
Daryabar Fossa is named for the land from which Princess Daryabar came in One Thousand and One Nights. The word Daryabar is Persian دریابار and means "Seaside".
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