Fig. 141.
120. The Valley of the Alps.—The range of the Alps is shown in Fig. 141. The great crater at the north end of this range is named Plato. It is seventy miles in diameter.
The most remarkable feature of the Alps is the valley near the centre of the range. It is more than seventy-five miles long, and about six miles wide at the broadest part. When examined under favorable circumstances, with a high magnifying power, it is seen to be a vast flat-bottomed valley, bordered by gigantic mountains, some of which attain heights of ten thousand feet or more.
Fig. 142.
121. Isolated Peaks.—There are comparatively few isolated peaks to be found on the surface of the moon. One of the most remarkable of these is that known as Pico, and shown in Fig. 142. Its height exceeds eight thousand feet, and it is about three times as long at the base as it is broad. The summit is cleft into three peaks, as is shown by the three-peaked shadow it casts on the plain.
122. Bright Rays.—About the time of full moon, with a telescope of moderate power, a number of bright lines may be seen radiating from several of the lunar craters, extending often to the distance of hundreds of miles. These streaks do not arise from any perceptible difference of level of the surface, they have no very definite outline, and they do not present any sloping sides to catch more sunlight, and thus shine brighter, than the general surface. Indeed, one great peculiarity of them is, that they come out most forcibly when the sun is shining perpendicularly upon them: hence they are best seen when the moon is at full, and they are not visible at all at those regions upon which the sun is rising or setting. They are not diverted by elevations in their path, but traverse in their course craters, mountains, and plains alike, giving a slight additional brightness to all objects over which they pass, but producing no other effect upon them. "They look as if, after the whole surface of the moon had assumed its final configuration, a vast brush charged with a whitish pigment had been drawn over the globe in straight lines, radiating from a central point, leaving its trail upon every thing it touched, but obscuring nothing."
Fig. 143.