List of mountains on Mars by height

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This is a list of mountains on Mars by elevation, the vertical position relative to the areoid, which is the Martian vertical datum (the surface defined as zero elevation by average martian atmospheric pressure and planet radius). Elevation is not the height above the surrounding terrain (topographic prominence).

  • A mons (plural montes) is a term used in astrogeology to name extraterrestrial mountains and may or may not be of volcanic origin.
  • A patera refers to the dish-shaped depression atop a volcano that is not very high compared to its diameter.
  • A tholus (pl. tholi) is the term used in astrogeology to describe a small domical mountain or hill.
  • Listed mons elevation is the highest point (at 16 pixels/degree) within the feature.
  • Listed patera elevation is the average elevation of the shallow dish-shaped depression (the actual 'patera') at the summit.

Notable extreme elevations on Earth and Venus are included (in bold and Italics) for comparison, where the given elevations are relative to mean sea level.

Name Elevation (m) Elevation (feet)
Olympus Mons (formerly Nix Olympica) 21,287.4 69,839
Ascraeus Mons 18,209 59,741
Arsia Mons 17,779 58,330
Pavonis Mons 14,307 46,939
Elysium Mons 13,862 45,479
Maxwell Montes, Venus (tallest mountain on Venus) 11,000 36,000
Mauna Kea, Earth (height from ocean floor) 10,203 33,476
Mount Everest, Earth 8,848 29,029
Tharsis Tholus 8,000–9,000 26,000–29,000
Ceraunius Tholus 8,500 27,887
Biblis Tholus (formerly Patera) 7,198 23,616
Alba Mons (formerly Patera) 6,815 22,359
Ulysses Tholus (formerly Patera) 5,863 19,236
Mount Sharp (officially Aeolis Mons)[1][2][3][4] 5,500 18,000
Hecates Tholus 5,300 17,388
Uranius Mons (formerly Patera) 4,853 15,922
Albor Tholus 4,500 14,763
Anseris Mons 3,959 12,989
Hadriacus Mons (formerly Hadriaca Patera) 3,959 12,989
Euripus Mons 3,945 12,943
Tyrrhenus Mons (formerly Tyrrhena Patera) 3,920 12,861
3,789 12,431
Chronius Mons 3,240 10,630
Apollinaris Mons (formerly Patera) 3,155 10,351
Gonnus Mons 2,937 9,636
2,800 9,186
Syrtis Major Planum 2,300 7,546
2,066 6,778
Nili Patera 2,036 6,680
Pityusa Patera 1,877 6,158
1,313 4,308
Peneus Patera 1,276 4,186
1,143 3,750
826 2,710
Pindus Mons 704 2,310
Meroe Patera 542 1,778
Dead Sea, Earth -420 -1,378
Orcus Patera -764 -2,507
-1,277 -4,190
-2,325 -7,628
-2,470 -8,104
Bentley Subglacial Trench, Earth -2,555 -8,383
Octantis Mons -2,731 -8,960
Diana Chasma, Venus -2,900 -9,504
Galaxius Mons -3,972 -13,031
Hellas Planitia -7,152 -23,465
Challenger Deep, Earth -11,034 -36,200

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ USGS (16 May 2012). "Three New Names Approved for Features on Mars". USGS. Archived from the original on 28 July 2012. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
  2. ^ NASA Staff (27 March 2012). "'Mount Sharp' on Mars Compared to Three Big Mountains on Earth". NASA. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
  3. ^ Agle, D. C. (28 March 2012). "'Mount Sharp' On Mars Links Geology's Past and Future". NASA. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
  4. ^ Staff (29 March 2012). "NASA's New Mars Rover Will Explore Towering 'Mount Sharp'". Space.com. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  • United States Geological Survey data files megt90n000eb.img and megt90n000eb.lbl

External links[]

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