FIRST QUARTER TO FULL MOON
II
FIRST QUARTER TO FULL MOON
NOTWITHSTANDING the signs of impatience which my friend had manifested when we were passing, in our review of the photographs, from one lunar ring mountain to another, all more or less similar in appearance and characteristics, I was gratified to see that her mind was still attracted to the subject of the moon, and during the lunch she, of her own accord, began to talk of it.
“You have said so much about volcanic occurrences on the moon,” she remarked, “that I wonder why you do not call those immense mountains ‘volcanoes.’ I observe that you always speak of them as ‘rings,’ or ‘mountain rings,’ or ‘ring plains’; while to me, although to be sure I am no geologist and have perhaps no right to an opinion, they seem plainly to be just huge volcanoes and nothing else.”
“Your observation is quite correct,” I replied, “as far as superficial appearance goes, and I may add that these great rings are often called volcanoes. If we apply the proper adjective and name them ‘lunar volcanoes,’ perhaps there can be no objection to the term. But they are certainly widely different from our terrestrial volcanoes. The difference is not in size alone, although in that regard it is enormous. There is a far more significant difference, which you could hardly be expected to notice in a simple inspection of the photographs, although it is evident when once pointed out. I refer to the fact that what seem to be the craters of lunar volcanoes are not situated on the tops of mountains. They are immense plains, more or less irregular in surface, and often having a peak or a group of peaks in the center, while around these plains always extends a mountain ring, steep on the inner side, and having a gradual slope without. But most significant fact of all, the plains, or floors inside the ring, are almost invariably situated thousands of feet below the general level of the moon. If the terrestrial volcanoes were formed on the plan of the lunar ones, when we visit Vesuvius, instead of climbing up a mountain rising out of the midst of a plain and capped with a cone, having a funnel-shaped crater in the center, we should find before us a relatively low, circular elevation, on surmounting which there would appear on the inside of the circle a great basinlike hollow, far below the level of the surrounding country. In the center of this, distant from the lofty encircling walls, would be seen a conical hill with smoke and vapor issuing from a vent at its summit. The top of this crater hill would be lower than the rim of the basin-shaped hollow, so that the whole volcano with its immediate surroundings would be inclosed and shut off from the environing upper world by the sides of the basin. While you finish your coffee I will make a sketch which may render this difference between lunar and terrestrial volcanoes evident at a glance.”
Lunar Volcano, in Section.
Terrestrial Volcano, in Section.