Coordinates | 31°06′S 29°18′W / 31.1°S 29.3°W |
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Diameter | 7 km |
Depth | Unknown |
Colongitude | 29° at sunrise |
Eponym | Albert Marth |
Marth is a small lunar impact crater located in the northwest part of the Palus Epidemiarum. It was named after German astronomer Albert Marth.[1] To the northwest is the crater Dunthorne, and to the southwest lies Ramsden. This feature lies in a system of rilles named the Rimae Ramsden, and an interrupted branch passes only a few kilometers to the south of the rim.
Marth is unusual for having a double rim, with a smaller inner crater concentric to the outer rim. The smaller crater is located near the center of the larger rim, giving the feature a bullseye appearance.