Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/impact-craters-on-mercury

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

List of craters on Mercury

None

List of craters on Mercury

Summary

None

|pie chart ( 414 : Mercurian : black) ( 1624 : Lunar: #D6D6D6 : List of craters on the Moon) ( 1092 : Martian: red : List of craters on Mars) ( 900 : Venusian : yellow : List of craters on Venus) ( 1198 : Others : white)

This is a list of named craters on Mercury, the innermost planet of the Solar System (for other features, see list of geological features on Mercury). Most Mercurian craters are named after famous writers, artists and composers. According to the rules by IAU's Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature, all new craters must be named after an artist that was famous for more than fifty years, and dead for more than three years, before the date they are named.

, there are 444 named Mercurian craters, a small fraction of the total number of named Solar System craters, most of which are lunar, Martian and Venerian craters.

Other, non-planetary bodies with numerous named craters include Callisto (141), Ganymede (131), Rhea (128), Vesta (90), Ceres (90), Dione (73), Iapetus (58), Enceladus (53), Tethys (50) and Europa (41). For a full list, see List of craters in the Solar System.

lc=y}}

A

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Abedin116.232009Zainul Abedin, Bangladeshi painter
Abu Nuwas1171976Abu Nuwas, Arabic poet
Africanus Horton1401976Africanus Horton, Sierra Leonean writer
Ahmad Baba1261979Ahmad Baba al Massufi, West African writer
Ailey232012Alvin Ailey, American choreographer
Aksakov1742012Sergey Aksakov, Russian author
Akutagawa1062015Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, Japanese writer
Al-Akhtal94.291985Akhtal, Arab poet
Alencar1061979José de Alencar, Brazilian novelist
Al-Hamadhani1641979Badi' az-Zaman al-Hamadhani, Arab writer
Al-Jāhiz831976Al-Jahiz, Arab author
Alver1512013Betti Alver, Estonian poet
Amaral1052008Tarsila do Amaral, Brazilian artist
Amru Al-Qays471976Imru Al-Qays Ibn Hujr, Arabic poet
Andal1091976Aandaal, Tamil writer
Aneirin4672014Aneirin, Welsh poet (6th century)
Angelou182019Maya Angelou, American author and poet
Anguissola352017Sofonisba Anguissola, Italian painter
Anyte202017Anyte of Tegea, Greek poet
Apollodorus412008Apollodorus of Damascus, Ancient Greek architect
Aristoxenus521979Aristoxenus, Ancient Greek writer
Asawa1302024Ruth Aiko Asawa, Japanese-American sculptor
Aśvaghoṣa881976Aśvaghoṣa, Sanskrit, poet
Atget1002008Eugène Atget, French photographer

B

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Bach214.291976Johann Sebastian Bach, German composer
Bagryana1012015Elisaveta Bagryana, Bulgarian poet
Balagtas1041976Francisco Balagtas, Filipino poet
Balanchine382012George Balanchine, Georgian choreographer
Baranauskas362015Antanas Baranauskas, Lithuanian poet
Barney292013Natalie Clifford Barney, American-French playwright, poet, and novelist
Balzac671976Honoré de Balzac, French writer
Bartók1181979Béla Bartók, Hungarian composer
Barma1231982Postnik "Barma" Yakovlev, Russian architect
Bashō751979Matsuo Bashō, Japanese poet
Bechet17.62013Sidney Bechet, American jazz musician and composer
Beckett602008Clarice Beckett, Australian painter
Beethoven6301976Ludwig van Beethoven, German composer
Bek322010Bek, Egyptian sculptor
Belinskij70.671985Vissarion Belinsky, Russian literary critic
Bellini452019Giovanni Bellini, Italian painter
Bello1391976Andrés Bello, Venezuelan writer
Benoit402009Rigaud Benoit, Haitian artist
Berkel232009Sabri Berkel, Turkish painter
Berlioz31.442013Hector Berlioz, French composer
Bernini168.131976Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Italian sculptor
Berry252020Chuck Berry, American singer and songwriter
Bilokur672024Kateryna Bilokur, Ukrainian painter
Bjornson75.931985Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Norwegian poet
Boccaccio151.951976Giovanni Boccaccio, Italian writer
Boethius1141976Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius, Roman philosopher
Botticelli136.351979Sandro Botticelli, Italian artist
Boznańska722015Olga Boznańska, Polish painter
Brahms1001979Johannes Brahms, German composer
Bramante1561976Donato Bramante, Italian architect
Brontë681976The Brontë family, English writers and artists
Brooks342015Gwendolyn Brooks, American poet and novelist
Bruegel721985Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Flemish painter
Brunelleschi128.571976Filippo Brunelleschi, Italian architect
Bunin372019Ivan Bunin, Russian author
Burke28.52015Billie Burke, American actress
Burns431985Robert Burns, Scottish poet
Byron106.581976Lord Byron, English poet

C

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Calder242013Alexander Calder, American sculptor
Callicrates681976Kallicrates, Ancient Greek architect
Calvino672009Italo Calvino, Italian writer
Camões701976Luís de Camões, Portuguese writer
Canova462018Antonio Canova, Italian sculptor
Capote882013Truman Capote, American Author
Caravaggio1852013Michelangelo Merisi Caravaggio, Italian painter
Carducci108.191976Giosuè Carducci, Italian poet
Carleton1772018William Carleton, Irish writer
Carolan24.342015Turlough Carolan, Irish composer and performer
Caruso312013Enrico Caruso, Italian singer
Carvalho90Beth Carvalho, Brazilian musician
Castiglione802015Giuseppe Castiglione, Italian painter
Catullus100.22012Gaius Valerius Catullus, Roman poet
Cervantes213.161976Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish writer
Cézanne671985Paul Cézanne, French painter
Chaikovskij1711976Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Russian composer
Chao Meng-Fu140.731976Zhao Mengfu, Chinese artist
Chekhov1941976Anton Chekhov, Russian playwright and writer
Chesterton37.232012Gilbert Keith Chesterton, English author
Chiang Kui411976Jiang Kui, Chinese poet
Chŏng Chŏl1431979Chŏng Ch'ŏl, Korean poet
Chopin1311976Frédéric Chopin, Polish composer
Chu Ta1001976Zhu Da, Chinese painter
Codesido642024Julia Codesido, Peruvian painter
Coleridge1121976Samuel Taylor Coleridge, English poet
Copland2082010Aaron Copland, American composer
Copley341976John Singleton Copley, American painter
Couperin801979The Couperin family of French musicians
Cunningham372008Imogen Cunningham, American photographer

D

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Dali1762008Salvador Dalí, Spanish painter
Damer602013Anne Seymour Damer, English sculptor
Darío1511976Rubén Darío, Nicaraguan writer
David232013Jacques-Louis David, French painter
de Graft682009Joe de Graft, Ghanaian playwright
Debussy812010Claude Debussy, French composer
Degas541979Edgar Degas, French artist
Delacroix1581979Eugène Delacroix, French artist
Derain1672009André Derain, French artist
Derzhavin1561979Gavril Romanovich Derzhavin, Russian poet
Despréz47.051979Josquin des Prez, Franco-Flemish composer
Dickens77.311976Charles Dickens, English novelist
Disney1132012Walt Disney, American animator
Dominici202010Maria de Dominici, Maltese painter
Donelaitis852013Kristijonas Donelaitis, Lithuanian poet
Donne861976John Donne, English poet
Dostoevskij430.061979Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Russian novelist
Dowland1581979John Dowland, English composer
Driscoll302015Clara Driscoll, American artist
Duccio1322013Duccio di Buoninsegna, Italian painter
Du Fu332015Du Fu, Chinese artist
Dürer1951976Albrecht Dürer, German artist
Dvorák751976Antonín Dvořák, Czech composer

E

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Eastman672009Charles Eastman, Sioux author
Echegaray631985José Echegaray, Spanish dramatist
Egonu252012Uzo Egonu, Nigerian artist
Eitoku1011976Kanō Eitoku, Japanese artist
El Husseini872024Jumana El Husseini, Palestinian painter and sculptor
Ellington2162012Duke Ellington, American musician
Eminescu1292008Mihai Eminescu, Romanian poet
Enheduanna1052015Enheduanna, Sumerian poet
Enwonwu382008Ben Enwonwu, Nigerian painter
Ensor24.922013James Ensor, Belgian painter
Equiano1021976Olaudah Equiano, Benin writer
Erté48.52013Erté, Russian-born French artist

F

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Faulkner1682012William Faulkner, American author
Fet791985Afanasy Fet, Russian poet
Firdousi982010Hakim Ferdowsi, Persian poet
Flaubert951985Gustave Flaubert, French author
Flaiano432013Ennio Flaiano, Italian author
Fonteyn292012Margot Fonteyn, English ballet dancer
Freire512024María Freire, Uruguayan painter
Fuller26.972013Richard Buckminster Fuller, American engineer and architect
Futabatei571976Futabatei Shimei, Japanese author

G

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Gainsborough951985Thomas Gainsborough, English painter
Gaudí812012Antoni Gaudí i Cornet, Spanish Catalan architect
Gauguin701979Paul Gauguin, French artist
Geddes842010Wilhelmina Geddes, Irish stained glass artist
Ghiberti1101976Lorenzo Ghiberti, Italian sculptor
Giambologna692013Giambologna, Flemish sculptor
Gibran1062009Kahlil Gibran, Lebanese American poet and artist
Giotto1441976Giotto di Bondone, Italian painter
Glinka892008Mikhail Glinka, Russian composer
Gluck1001979Christoph Willibald Gluck, Austrian composer
Goethe317.171979Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German writer
Gogol791985Nikolai Gogol, Russian playwright
Gordimer582019Nadine Gordimer, South African writer
Goya1381976Francisco Goya, Spanish artist
Grainger1132012Percy Grainger, Australian composer
Grieg591985Edvard Grieg, Norwegian composer
Grotell48.252012Maija Grotell, Finnish and American ceramist
Guido d'Arezzo581976Guido of Arezzo, Italian music theorist

H

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Hafiz2802014Hafiz of Shiraz, Persian poet
Halim442024Tahia Halim, Egyptian painter
Hals931985Frans Hals, Dutch painter
Han Kan501985Han Gan, Chinese painter
Handel1381976George Frideric Handel, German composer
Harunobu1071976Suzuki Harunobu, Japanese artist
Hauptmann1181985Gerhart Hauptmann, German playwright
Hawthorne1201979Nathaniel Hawthorne, American novelist
Haydn2511976Joseph Haydn, Austrian composer
Heaney1252017Seamus Heaney, Irish poet and playwright
Heine731979Heinrich Heine, German poet
Hemingway1262009Ernest Hemingway, American writer
Henri163.82012Robert Henri, American painter
Hesiod1011976Hesiod, Ancient Greek poet
Hiroshige1381976Andō Hiroshige, Japanese artist
Hitomaro1051976Kakinomoto no Hitomaro, Japanese poet
Hodgkins192009Frances Hodgkins, New Zealand painter
Hokusai1142010Katsushika Hokusai, Japanese painter
Holbein1151979Hans Holbein the Younger, German artist
Holberg641976Ludvig Holberg, Danish writer
Holst1702012Gustav Holst, British composer
Homer3191976Homer Simpson, Character in The Simpsons
Hopper362012Edward Hopper, American painter
Horace561976Horace, Roman poet
Hovnatanian342008Hakob Hovnatanian, Armenian painter
Hugo2061979Victor Hugo, French writer
Hun Kal0.931976'20' in the language of the Maya (serves as Mercury's a meridian reference point)
Hurley672013Frank Hurley, Australian photographer

I

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Ibsen1591976Henrik Ibsen, Norwegian playwright
Ictinus58.031976Iktinos, Ancient Greek architect
Imhotep1591976Imhotep, Ancient Egyptian architect
Ives181979Charles Ives, American composer
Izquierdo1742009María Izquierdo, Mexican painter

J

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Janáček471985Leoš Janáček, Czech composer
Jiménez272019Juan Ramón Jiménez, Spanish poet and author
Jókai931979Mór Jókai, Hungarian writer
Jobim1672015Antônio Carlos Jobim, Brazilian composer
Joplin1392012Scott Joplin, American composer
Josetsu302019Taikō Josetsu, Japanese ink painter
Judah Ha-Levi851976Yehuda Halevi, Spanish-Jewish writer

K

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Kandinsky602012Wassily Kandinsky, Russian painter
Karsh582015Yousuf Karsh, Armenian-Canadian photographer
Kālidāsā1601976Kālidāsa, Sanskrit writer
Keats107.851976John Keats, English poet
Kenkō1051976Yoshida Kenkō, Japanese writer
Kerouac1102015Jack Kerouac, American writer
Kertész322008André Kertész, Hungarian photographer
Khansa1131976Al-Khansa, Arabic poet
Kipling1642010Rudyard Kipling, English author
Kirby312019Jack Kirby, American illustrator
Kobro542012Katarzyna Kobro, Polish sculptor
Kofi1362012Vincent Kofi, Ghanaian sculptor
Komeda542012Krzysztof Komeda, Polish composer
Kōshō641985Kōshō, Japanese sculptor
Kuan Han-Ching1431979Guan Hanqing, Chinese playwright
Kuiper621976Gerard Kuiper, American astronomer
Kulthum312015Umm Kulthum, Egyptian singer
Kunisada241.452009Utagawa Kunisada, Japanese woodblock printmaker
Kuniyoshi272014Utagawa Kuniyoshi, Japanese painter and printmaker
Kurosawa1521976Kinko Kurosawa, Japanese musician
Kyōsai392012Kawanabe Kyōsai, Japanese artist

L

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Lange176.232009Dorothea Lange, American photographer
Larrocha1962013Alicia de Larrocha, Spanish pianist
Laxness25.892013Halldór Laxness, Icelandic writer
Le Guin612024Ursula K. Le Guin, American author
L'Engle622013Madeleine L'Engle, American author
Lennon952013John Lennon, former Beatles member
Lennon-Picasso Basin14502018John Lennon and Pablo Picasso
Leopardi71.451976Giacomo Leopardi, Italian writer
Lermontov1661976Mikhail Lermontov, Russian writer
Lessing951985Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, German dramatist
Li Ching-Chao691976Li Qingzhao, Chinese writer
Li Po1261976Li Bai, Chinese poet
Liang Kai1451979Liang Kai, Chinese artist
Lismer139.122012Arthur Lismer, Canadian painter
Liszt791985Franz Liszt, Hungarian composer
Lorde452022Audre Lorde, American writer
Lovecraft51.972013H. P. Lovecraft, American author
Lu Hsun961976Lu Xun, Chinese writer
Lysippus1551976Lysippos, Ancient Greek sculptor

M

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Ma Chih-Yuan1971976Ma Zhiyuan, Chinese writer
Machaut1041976Guillaume de Machaut, French poet and composer
MacNicol422022Bessie MacNicol, Scottish painter
Magritte1492012René Magritte, Belgian painter
Mahler1041976Gustav Mahler, Bohemian composer
Mansart84.971979Jules Hardouin-Mansart, French architect
Mansur951979Ustad Mansur, Mughal artist
March831979Ausiàs March, Catalan poet
Mark Twain1421976Mark Twain, American novelist
Martí69.481976José Martí, Cuban writer
Martins12.42019Maria Martins, Brazilian sculptor
Martial511979Martial, Roman poet
Matabei242009Iwasa Matabei, Japanese painter
Matisse189.041976Henri Matisse, French painter
Melville1461976Herman Melville, American novelist
Mena151976Juan de Mena, Spanish poet
Mendelssohn2912012Felix Mendelssohn, German composer
Mendes Pinto1921976Fernão Mendes Pinto, Portuguese writer
Michelangelo229.711979Michelangelo, Italian artist
Mickiewicz1031976Adam Mickiewicz, Polish writer
Milton180.851976John Milton, English poet
Mistral1021976Gabriela Mistral, Chilean poet
Mofolo1031976Thomas Mofolo, Lesotho writer
Molière1391976Molière, French playwright
Monet2031979Claude Monet, French artist
Monk122013Thelonious Monk, American jazz musician
Monteverdi1341979Claudio Monteverdi, Italian composer
Moody832008Ronald Moody, Jamaican painter
Morrison352022Toni Morrison; American author
Mozart2411976Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Austrian composer
Munch572008Edvard Munch, Norwegian painter
Munkácsy1932009Mihály Munkácsy, Hungarian painter
Murasaki1321976Murasaki Shikibu, Japanese writer
Mussorgskij1151979Modest Mussorgsky, Russian composer
Myron251979Myron, Ancient Greek sculptor

N

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Nabokov1662012Vladimir Nabokov, Russian and American writer
Nairne562022Carolina Nairne, Scottish songwriter
Namatjira342015Albert Namatjira, Australian Aboriginal artist
Nampeyo491976Nampeyo, Hopi potter
Navoi692008Ali-Shir Nava'i, Uzbek poet
Nāwahī382008Joseph Nāwahī, Hawaiian painter
Neruda1122008Jan Neruda, Czech poet and writer, and Johann Baptist Georg Neruda, Czech composer
Nervo661979Amado Nervo, Mexican poet
Neumann1221976Johann Balthasar Neumann, German architect
Nizāmī771979Nizami, Persian poet
Nureyev162012Rudolf Nureyev, Soviet and British ballet dancer

O

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Ōkyo661985Maruyama Ōkyo, Japanese painter
Oskison1222008John Milton Oskison, Cherokee author
Ovid411976Ovid, Roman poet

P

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Pahinui542013Gabby Pahinui, Hawaiian slack-key guitarist and singer
Pasch372012Ulrika Pasch, Swedish painter
Petipa122012Marius Petipa, French and Russian choreographer and dancer
Petőfi612013Sándor Petőfi, Hungarian poet
Petrarch1671976Petrarch, Italian poet
Petronius362012Petronius, Roman author
Phidias1681976Phidias, Ancient Greek artist and architect
Philoxenus871976Philoxenus of Cythera, Ancient Greek poet
Piazzolla382024Astor Piazzolla, Argentinian tango composer
Picasso1342010Pablo Picasso, Spanish painter
Pigalle1531976Jean-Baptiste Pigalle, French sculptor
Plath352015Sylvia Plath, American poet
Po Chü-I701976Bai Juyi, Chinese poet
Po Ya1011976Bo Ya, Chinese musician
Poe772008Edgar Allan Poe, American poet
Polygnotus1241976Polygnotus, Ancient Greek painter
Popova342012Lyubov Popova, Russian painter and designer
Praxiteles1981979Praxiteles, Ancient Greek sculptor
Prokofiev1122012Sergei Prokofiev, Russian composer
Proust1451976Marcel Proust, French novelist
Puccini761976Giacomo Puccini, Italian composer
Purcell87.671979Henry Purcell, English composer
Pushkin2321976Alexander Pushkin, Russian poet

Q

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Qi Baishi152008Qi Baishi, Chinese painter
Qiu Ying202012Qiu Ying, Chinese painter

R

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Rabelais1541976François Rabelais, French writer
Rachmaninoff3052010Sergei Rachmaninoff, Russian composer
Raden Saleh232008Raden Saleh, Javanese painter
Raditladi2582008Leetile Disang Raditladi, Botswanan writer
Rajnis801976Rainis, Latvian writer
Remarque25.92013Erich Maria Remarque, German author
Rameau581976Jean-Philippe Rameau, French composer
Raphael3421976Raphael, Italian artist
Ravel781985Maurice Ravel, French composer
Rembrandt7162009Rembrandt, Dutch artist
Renoir2201976Pierre-Auguste Renoir, French artist
Repin951976Ilya Yefimovich Repin, Russian artist
Riemenschneider1831979Tilman Riemenschneider, German sculptor
Rilke821976Rainer Maria Rilke, German poet
Rimbaud781985Arthur Rimbaud, French poet
Rikyū22.42013Sen no Rikyū, Japanese tea master
Rivera402015Diego Rivera, Mexican painter
Rizal642019José Rizal, Filipino writer
Rodin2301976Auguste Rodin, French sculptor
Roerich111.672013Nicholas Roerich, Russian painter
Rubens1581979Peter Paul Rubens, French artist
Rublev1291976Andrei Rublev, Russian icon painter
Rūdaki1241976Rudaki, Persian poet
Rude681985François Rude, French sculptor
Rūmī751985Mawlana Rumi, Persian poet
Rustaveli2002012Shota Rustaveli, Georgian poet
Ruysch642013Rachel Ruysch, Netherland painter

S

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Sadī66.541976Saadi, Persian poet
Saikaku641979Ihara Saikaku, Japanese poet
Sander472008August Sander, German photographer
Sanai4902014Sanai, Persian poet
Sapkota27.42015Mahananda Sapkota, Nepalese poet
Sarmiento951979Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, Argentinian writer
Savage932013Augusta Savage, American sculptor
Sayat-Nova1461979Sayat-Nova, Armenian poet
Scarlatti1321979Domenico Scarlatti, Alessandro Scarlatti, Italian composers
Schoenberg281976Arnold Schoenberg, Austrian composer
Schubert1901976Franz Schubert, Austrian composer
Scopas83.161976Scopas, Ancient Greek sculptor and architect
Sei1371976Sei Shōnagon, Japanese writer
Seuss642012Theodor Seuss Geisel, American author and cartoonist
Shakespeare3991979William Shakespeare, English writer
Shelley1711979Percy Bysshe Shelley, English poet
Sher-Gil772008Amrita Sher-Gil, Indian painter
Shevchenko1431976Taras Shevchenko, Ukrainian poet
Sholem Aleichem1961979Sholom Aleichem, Yiddish writer
Sibelius941985Jean Sibelius, Finnish composer
Simonides871985Simonides of Ceos, Greek poet
Sinan1341976Mimar Sinan, Turkish architect
Smetana1911985Bedřich Smetana, Czech composer
Snorri211976Snorri Sturluson, Icelandic poet
Sophocles1421976Sophocles, Ancient Greek dramatist
Sor Juana1021979Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, Mexican writer
Sōseki921985Natsume Sōseki, Japanese novelist
Sōtatsu1571976Tawaraya Sōtatsu, Japanese artist
Sousa1382012John Philip Sousa, American bandmaster and composer
Spitteler671976Carl Spitteler, Swiss poet
Steichen1962010Edward Steichen, American photographer
Stevenson1342012Robert Louis Stevenson, Scottish author
Stieglitz1002012Alfred Stieglitz, American photographer
Strauss172019Strauss family of musicians
Stravinsky1291979Igor Stravinsky, Russian composer
Strindberg1891979August Strindberg, Swedish writer
Sullivan153.231976Louis Sullivan, American architect
Sūr Dās1311979Sur, Hindu, poet
Surikov2241979Vasily Surikov, Russian artist
Sveinsdóttir212.792008Júlíana Sveinsdóttir, Icelandic artist

T

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Takanobu721985Fujiwara no Takanobu, Japanese poet
Takayoshi1361979Fujiwara no Takayoshi, Japanese painter
Tansen271976Tansen, Hindustani composer
Thākur1111976Rabindranath Tagore, Indian writer
Theophanes461976Theophanes the Greek, icon painter
Thoreau721985Henry David Thoreau, American poet
Tintoretto941976Tintoretto, Italian artist
Titian1091976Titian, Italian artist
To Ngoc Van712009To Ngoc Van, Vietnamese painter
Tolkien502012J. R. R. Tolkien, English writer
Tolstoj3551976Leo Tolstoy, Russian writer
Travers1642018Pamela Lyndon Travers, British writer
Tsai Wen-Chi1241976Cai Wenji, Chinese poet and composer
Tsao Chan1101976Cao Xueqin, Chinese novelist
Tsurayuki831976Ki no Tsurayuki, Japanese writer
Tung Yüan60.461979Dong Yuan, Chinese artist
Turgenev1361979Ivan Turgenev, Russian writer
Tyagaraja971976Tyāgarāja, Indian composer
Tryggvadóttir312012Nína Tryggvadóttir, Icelandic artist

U

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Unkei1211976Unkei, Japanese sculptor
Ustad Isa1381979Ustad Isa, architect

V

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Vālmiki2101976Valmiki, Indian poet
Van Dijck101.531979Anthony van Dyck, Flemish artist
Van Eyck2711979Jan van Eyck, Flemish artist
Van Gogh991976Vincent van Gogh, Dutch artist
Varma302013Raja Ravi Varma, Indian painter
Vazov332020Ivan Vazov, Bulgarian poet
Velázquez1281979Diego Velázquez, Spanish painter
Verdi1451979Giuseppe Verdi, Italian composer
Veronese452021Paolo Veronese, Italian painter
Vieira da Silva2742013Maria Helena Vieira da Silva, Portuguese-French painter
Villa-Lobos672015Heitor Villa-Lobos, Brazilian composer
Vincente1081979Gil Vicente, Portuguese writer
Vivaldi2131976Antonio Vivaldi, Italian composer
Vlaminck821985Maurice de Vlaminck, French painter
Vonnegut26.612017Kurt Vonnegut, American writer
Vyāsa2971979Vyasa, Indian poet

W

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Wagner1341976Richard Wagner, German composer
Wang Meng1651976Wang Meng, Chinese artist
Warhol912012Andy Warhol, American artist
Waters152012Muddy Waters, American musician
Wen Tianxiang166.422020Wen Tianxiang, Chinese poet
Wergeland421976Henrik Wergeland, Norwegian writer
Whitman641985Walt Whitman, American poet
Wren2041979Christopher Wren, English architect
Wu Shujuan1092024Wu Shujuan, Chinese painter

X

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Xiao Zhao242008Xiao Zhao, Chinese artist

Y

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Yamada17.12015Kosaku Yamada, Japanese composer and conductor
Yeats921976William Butler Yeats, Irish poet
Yoshikawa302012Eiji Yoshikawa, Japanese novelist
Yun Sŏn-Do761976Yun Sŏndo, Korean poet

Z

CraterCoordinatesDiameter
(km)Approval
YearEponymRef
Zeami1291976Zeami Motokiyo, Japanese playwright
Zola701979Émile Zola, French novelist

Terminology

As on the Moon and Mars, sequences of craters and basins of differing relative ages provide the best means of establishing stratigraphic order on Mercury. Overlap relations among many large mercurian craters and basins are clearer than those on the Moon. Therefore, as this map shows, we can build up many local stratigraphic columns involving both crater or basin materials and nearby plains materials.

Over all of Mercury, the crispness of crater rims and the morphology of their walls, central peaks, ejecta deposits, and secondary-crater fields have undergone systematic changes with time. The youngest craters or basins in a local stratigraphic sequence have the sharpest, crispest appearance. The oldest craters consist only of shallow depressions with slightly raised, rounded rims, some incomplete. On this basis, five age categories of craters and basins have been mapped; the characteristics of each are listed in the explanation. In addition, secondary crater fields are preserved around proportionally far more craters and basins on Mercury than on the Moon or Mars, and are particularly useful in determining overlap relations and degree of modification.

Because only limited photographic evidence was available from Mariner 10s three flybys of the planet, these divisions are often tentative. The five crater groups, from youngest to oldest, are:

  • c5: Fresh-appearing, sharp-rimmed, rayed craters. Highest albedo in map area; haloes and rays may extend many crater diameters from rim crests. Superposed on all other map units. Generally smaller and fewer than older craters.
  • c4: Fresh but slightly modified craters—Similar in morphology to c5 craters but without bright haloes or rays; sharp rim crests; continuous ejecta blankets; very few superposed secondary craters. Floors consist of crater or smooth plains materials.
  • c3: Modified craters—Rim crest continuous but slightly rounded and subdued. Ejecta blanket generally less extensive than those of younger craters of similar size. Superposed craters and rays common; smooth plains and intermediate plains materials cover floors of many craters. Central peaks more common than in c4 craters, probably because of larger average size of c3 craters.
  • c2: Subdued craters—Low-rimmed, relatively shallow craters, many with discontinuous rim crests. Floors covered by smooth plains and intermediate plains materials. Crater density of ejecta blankets similar to that of intermediate plains material.
  • c1 Degraded craters—Similar to c2 crater material but more deteriorated; many superposed craters.

Note

References

sv:Lista över geologiska strukturer på Merkurius#Kratrar

References

  1. "IAU{{dash}}Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature{{dash}}Mercury".
  2. Craters larger than 250 km in diameter are referred to as "basins" ''(also see {{Section link. Terminology)''.[https://astrogeology.usgs.gov/Projects/PlanetaryMapping/DIGGEOL/mercury/h7/h7.pdf H-7 text_all.word]
  3. (December 19, 2013). "Beatles Legend John Lennon Among Those Honored with Mercury Craters". NASA.
  4. (December 16, 2013). "Planetary Names: Crater, craters: Lennon on Mercury". International Astronomical Union (IAU).
  5. Denevi, B. W., Ernst, C. M., Prockter, L. M., and Robinson, M. S., 2018. The Geologic History of Mercury. In ''Mercury: The View After [[MESSENGER]]'' edited by Sean C. Solomon, Larry R. Nittler, and Brian J. Anderson. Cambridge Planetary Science. Chapter 6.
  6. Trask, Newell J.. (1984). "Geologic Map of the Discovery (H-11) Quadrangle of Mercury". U.S. Geological Survey.
  7. Pohn, H. A., and Offield, T. W., 1970, Lunar crater morphology and relative-age determination of lunar geologic units—Part 1. Classification: in Geological Survey research 1970, U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 700-C, p. C153–C162.
  8. Stuart-Alexander, D. E., and Wilhelms, D. E., 1975, The Nectarian System, a new lunar time-stratigraphic unit: U.S. Geological Survey Journal of Research, v. 3, no. l, p. 53–58.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about List of craters on Mercury — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report