Montes Harbinger
Montes Harbinger is an isolated cluster of lunar mountains at the western edge of the Mare Imbrium basin.[1]
Montes Harbinger | |
---|---|
![]() Apollo 15 image | |
Highest point | |
Listing | Lunar mountains |
Coordinates | 26.9°N 41.3°W |
Geography | |
Location | the Moon |

Oblique view facing west, also from Apollo 15

Southern Montes Harbinger at the terminator, foretelling sunrise on Aristarchus
The mountains consist of four primary ridges plus several smaller hills, each forming a small rise surrounded by the lunar mare. The cluster is centered at selenographic coordinates 26.9° N, 41.3° W, within a diameter of 93 km.[2] The formation is so-named because the peaks serve as the harbingers of dawn on the crater Aristarchus,[1] located to the southwest.
The flooded crater Prinz is located to the southwest.
References
- Rükl, Antonin; Richebé, Martine; Becker, Jean-Marc (1993). Gründ (ed.). Atlas de la Lune (in French). Paris. pp. 64–65. ISBN 978-2-700-01554-6. OCLC 301684184. bnf=FRBNF40580052.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - "Montes Harbinger". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
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