Fichier:Mars caves from NASA orbiters.jpg

Le contenu de la page n’est pas pris en charge dans d’autres langues.
Pɩlɩɩna Wikipediya

Kiɖe tɛɛ takayaɣ(Kpaɣna pɩkɩsɛlɩ 1 890 nɛ pɩtalɩ 1 265 ñɩŋgʋ, takayaɣ walanzɩ : 269 kio, MIME akɩlɩ : image/jpeg)

Takayaɣ kanɛ kalɩna Wikimedia Commons. Tamasɩ lɛɛsɩ pɩzɩɣ palabɩna-kɛ nɛ tʋmɩyɛ. Pataaɖɩ kɛ-kɛdʋʋ tɔm ka-takayɩhayʋʋ ngʋ kɩkɛdʋʋ kɔ-tɔm yɔ nɛ pɩ-tɛɛ.

Kɛdɩtʋ

Kɛdɩtʋ

Seven very dark holes on the north slope of a Martian volcano have been proposed as possible cave skylights, based on day-night temperature patterns suggesting they are openings to subsurface spaces. These six excerpts of images taken in visible-wavelength light by the Thermal Emission Imaging System camera on NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter show the seven openings. Solar illumination comes from the left in each frame. The volcano is Arsia Mons, at 9 degrees south latitude, 239 degrees east longitude.

The features have been given informal names to aid comparative discussion. They range in diameter from about 100 meters (328 feet) to about 225 meters (738 feet). The candidate cave skylights are (A) "Dena," (B) "Chloe," (C) "Wendy," (D) "Annie," (E) "Abby" (left) and "Nikki," and (F) "Jeanne." Arrows signify north and the direction of illumination.
Efemiye Uploaded September 24, 2007
Kiɖe http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/odyssey/images/cave2.html
Mayʋ NASA JPL USGS ASU NAU
Waɖɛ haʋ
(Ɖaɣnʋʋ labɩnaʋ takayaɣ kanɛ)
Public domain Ce fichier provient de la NASA. Sauf exception, les documents créés par la NASA ne sont pas soumis à copyright. Pour plus d'informations, voir la politique de copyright de la NASA.
Attention :
Autres versions
unlabeled version

Takayaɣ caanaʋ tɔm kɛdʋʋ

Tukina efemiye nɛ ñɩɣtʋ nɛ ŋna takayaɣ kanɛ ɛzɩ kaawɛʋ alɩwaatʋ ndʋ tɩ-taa yɔ.

Efemiye nɛ ñɩɣtʋTampɔɔWalanzɩLabɩnayʋTɔm taa nuutuu
lɛlɛɛyɔ24 Salaŋ fenaɣ 2007 à 02:2224 Salaŋ fenaɣ 2007 à 02:22 ñɔɔzɩtʋ kɩlɛɣzɩtʋ tɛ tampɔɔ1 890 × 1 265 (269 kio)DragonFire1024{{Information |Description=Seven very dark holes on the north slope of a Martian volcano have been proposed as possible cave skylights, based on day-night temperature patterns suggesting they are openings to subsurface spaces. These six excerpts of images

Takayɩhayʋʋ kɩtɩŋʋʋ lakɩna takayaɣ kanɛ tʋmɩyɛ :

takayaɣ labɩnaʋ nɛ paa anɩ

Wikinaa kɩtɩŋaa lɛlaa lakɩna kɩlɛmʋʋ kʋnɛ nɛ tʋmɩyɛ :

Cɔna takayaɣ labɩnaʋ tɩŋa

Mɛtadɔneewaa