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in height. Cassini epsilon and delta. Two adjoining mountain masses N. of Cassini, more than 5000 feet high. Eudoxus. S.E. of this formation, in N. lat. 43 deg., W. long. 10 deg., are two bright mountain masses, the more southerly rising 7000, and the other 4000 feet above the surface. Mount Hadley. The northern extremity of the Apennines, in N. lat. 27 deg. W. long. 5 deg., rising more than 15,000 feet above the Mare. Mount Bradley. A promontory of the Apennines, in N, lat. 23 deg., W. long. 1 deg., nearly 14,000 feet above the Mare Imbrium. The Silberschlag Range, running from near the S.E. side of Julius Caesar to the region W. of Agrippa. SECOND QUADRANT. The Alps. The eastern and greater portion. The Apennines. Nearly the whole of the range. The Carpathians. The Teneriffe Mountains. S.E. of Plato. Highest peak, 8000 feet. The Straight Range. East of the last, in N. lat. 48 deg., E. long. 20 deg. The Harbinger Mountains. N.W. of Aristarchus. The Hercynian Mountains. Near the N.E. limb, E. of Otto Struve, N. lat. 25 deg. Mount Huygens. A mountain mass projecting from the escarpment of the Apennines, in N. lat. 20 deg., E. long. 3 deg., one peak rising to 18,000 feet above the Mare Imbrium. Mount Wolf. A great square-shaped mountain mass, near the S.E. extremity of the Apennines, in N. lat. 17 deg., E. long. 9 deg., the loftiest peak rising to nearly 12,000 feet above the Mare Imbrium. Eratosthenes I and X. Two isolated mountains N. of this formation, in N. lat. 20 deg.; X is 1800 feet in height. Pico. A magnificent isolated mountain, S. of Plato, in N. lat. 45 deg., E. long. 9 deg., rising some 8000 feet above the Mare Imbrium. Pico B. A triple-peaked mountain a few miles S. of Pico. Piton. A bright isolated mountain 7000 feet high, in N. lat. 1 deg., E. long. 1 deg. Fontinelle A. A conspicuous isolated mountain about 3000 feet high, S. of Fontinelle. Archimedes Z. A triangular-shaped group E. of Archimedes, in N. lat. 31 deg., E. long. 8 deg., the highest of the peaks rising more than 2000 feet. Caroline Herschel. E. of this formation is a double-peaked mountain rising to 1300 feet. Gruithuisen delta and gamma. On the N. of this bright crater, in N. lat. 36 deg., E. long. 40 deg., rises a fine mountain, delta, nearly 6000 feet in height, and on the N.E. of it the larger mass gamma, almost as lofty. Mairan. There is a group of three bright little mountains, the
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