StarCo by Ludo Coppens © 2014-
Select a mons by clicking on the name. Move the mouse over the full scale image of the larger region to show names of prominent surface features and additional data: depth from rim to crater floor and diameter, taken from the Times Atlas of the Moon (Ed. H.A.G. Lewis, Times Newspapers Ltd., 1969; charts available online at http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/mapcatalog/LAC/) and from Virtual Moon Atlas (Christian Legrand & Patrick Chevalley).
A mons (ENG: mountain) is a more or less isolated mountain peak on the lunar surface. Many belong to the walls or terraces encircling the original mare forming depression. Up to about 5 km high (above surrounding mare plain).
(At right: Mons Hadley, taken from orbit; © NASA)