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EQUATOREastLongitudeWestLongitude
60 ° 30 ° 30 ° 60 °30 °60 °60 °60 ° 60 °North PoleSouth Pole30 °30 °30 °0 ° 0 °-15,000-30,00015,00030,0000 *United States (U.S.)Soviet Union (U.S.S.R.)/RussiaChinaJapanEuropean Space Agency (ESA)IndiaIsraelLandingCrash or impactCountry or agencyLunar missionsLunar topography (in feet)LAMBERT AZIMUTHAL EQUAL-AREA PROJECTION0 mi 4000 km 400NEW PHASE OF
EXPLORATION
National Geographic has always beenat the forefront of lunar mapping.As the Apollo program closed in on itsgoal, cartographers relied on photosfrom 1966 and 1967 orbiter missions tocreate the February 1969 hand- paintedmap—considered the best referenceat the time. Our newest version usesa mosaic of some 15,000 images anddetailed height measurements fromNASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter,which has surveyed the entire surface.The moon is peppered with probesand landers, the legacy of humanefforts to explore it.FAMILIAR FACE
With the moon gravitationallylocked, the near side always facesthe Earth. Its circular plains—calledmaria, from Latin for seas—formedwhen lava filled impact basins.Near side
*As the m oon has no sea level, zero isset where a sphere with a 1,079-mileradius would intersect the surface.A larger version of this map can bepurchased at: natgeo.com/spacemaps.