Tebbutt is a lunar impact crater that is located near the southwestern edge of Mare Crisium. It was named after Australian astronomer John Tebbutt.[1] It was formerly designated Picard G before being named by the IAU, and lies south of the crater Picard. To the north of Tebbutt, but farther east than Picard, is the flooded Lick.

Tebbutt
Apollo 15 Mapping camera image
Coordinates9°36′N 53°36′E / 9.6°N 53.6°E / 9.6; 53.6
Diameter31 km
Colongitude307° at sunrise
EponymJohn Tebbutt
Oblique view from Apollo 17

This crater has a worn and damaged outer rim along its eastern half, but the rim is all but nonexistent on the western face, being little more than a pair of curved ridges beneath the surface. Lava flows have overflowed this western rim and submerged the interior, leaving a relatively level and featureless interior. A small craterlet marks the southern end of the interior floor, and several tiny craters mark the surviving rim.

References

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  1. ^ "Tebbutt (crater)". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
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