Mons Penck

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Mons Penck lies near the right edge of this image, just below center. Also visible are the Kant (lower center) and Zöllner (upper left) craters. NASA photo.
Mons Penck lies near the right edge of this image, just below center. Also visible are the Kant (lower center) and Zöllner (upper left) craters. NASA photo.

Mons Penck is a mountain promontory on the near side of the Moon. It lies just to the northeast of the Kant crater, to the north of Ibn-Rushd crater and the Rupes Altai scarp. Southeast of Mons Penck are the prominent double crater consisting of Theophilus and Cyrillus.

The selenographic coordinates of this peak are 10.0° S, 21.6° E. It occupies a diameter of about 30 km around the base and climbs to an altitude of 4 km (13,000 feet). It was named for Albrecht Penck (1858-1945), a German geographer and geologist.

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