AWB assisted migrate {{journal reference}} to {{cite journal}}
|
migrate {{book reference}} to {{cite book}} using AWB
|
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
*{{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}} |
*{{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}} |
||
*{{ |
*{{cite book | author=Rothery, David A. | title=Satellites of the Outer Planets: Worlds in their own right | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1999 | id=ISBN 0-19-512555-X}} |
||
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 Arabian Nights.
![]() | This article about an extraterrestrial geological feature is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |