118. Dark Chasms.—Dark cracks, or chasms, have been observed on various parts of the moon's surface. They sometimes occur singly, and sometimes in groups. They are often seen to radiate from some central cone, and they appear to be of volcanic origin. They have been called canals and rills.
Fig. 138.
One of the most remarkable groups of these chasms is that to the west of the crater named Triesneker. The crater and the chasms are shown in Fig. 138. Several of these great cracks obviously diverge from a small crater near the west bank of the great one, and they subdivide as they extend from the apparent point of divergence, while they are crossed by others. These cracks, or chasms, are nearly a mile broad at the widest part, and, after extending full a hundred miles, taper away till they become invisible.
Fig. 139.
119. Mountain-Ranges.—There are comparatively few mountain-ranges on the moon. The three most conspicuous are those which partially enclose Mare Imbrium; namely, the Apennines on the south, and the Caucasus and the Alps on the east and north-east. The Apennines are the most extended of these, having a length of about four hundred and fifty miles. They rise gradually, from a comparatively level surface towards the south-west, in the form of innumerable small elevations, which increase in number and height towards the north-east, where they culminate in a range of peaks whose altitude and rugged aspect must form one of the most terribly grand and romantic scenes which imagination can conceive. The north-east face of the range terminates abruptly in an almost vertical precipice; while over the plain beneath, intensely black spire-like shadows are cast, some of which at sunrise extend full ninety miles, till they lose themselves in the general shading due to the curvature of the lunar surface. Many of the peaks rise to heights of from eighteen thousand to twenty thousand feet above the plain at their north-east base (Fig. 139).
Fig. 140.
Fig. 140 represents an ideal lunar landscape near the base of such a lunar range. Owing to the absence of an atmosphere, the stars will be visible in full daylight.