Earth's Moon - Galileo
False-color image of Mare Tranquillitatis and Serenitatis on the moon
Galileo false-color image of the Mare Tranquillitatis
and Mare Serenitatis areas of the Moon. The picture
was constructed from four exposures taken during
Galileo's second Earth/Moon flyby on 8 December 1992.
The colors are enhanced to highlight compositional
differences. Mare Tranquillitatis at left appears
blue due to titanium enrichment. Orange soil in
Mare Sarenitatis at lower right indicates lower
titanium. Dark purple areas at left center mark
the Apollo 17 landing site, composed of explosive
volcanic deposits. Red lunar highlands indicate
low iron and titanium. Mare Serenitatis is roughly
1300 km across and North is at 5:00. The 95 km
diameter crater Posidonius, centered at 32 N, 30 E,
is at the middle of the bottom of the frame.
(Galileo, P-41477)
Moon: Geology
Clementine Mission
Imaging Science