Image:Mare Serenetatis AS17-M-0940-0947-0954.jpg|These are three views of Mare Serenitatis, taken by the mapping camera of the
Apollo 17 mission in 1972, facing north-northeast from an average altitude of 107 km. At the right is the east margin of Mare Serenitatis, with the 95 km diameter crater
Posidonius at the central horizon, the basalt-flooded
Le Monnier crater to the south, the mare ridge (or
wrinkle ridge)
Dorsa Aldrovandi at center,
Littrow crater at the right, and the landing site of Apollo 17 in the lower right corner in the
Taurus–Littrow valley. In the center is the relatively small crater
Bessel (16 km), and two prominent rays probably from the
Tycho impact far to the south. At the left is the western margin of the mare, with the
Caucasus Mountains at the central horizon, the
Apennine Mountains at left, and the
Sulpicius Gallus Rilles at the lower right. The Sun elevation drops from 24 degrees at right to 5 degrees at left as the
Command Module America orbited the Moon. Image:Mare Serenitatis AS17-150-23069.jpg|Some of the strongest tonal, color, and structural contrasts among mare materials occur in Mare Serenitatis. This color Apollo 17 image shows that the dark materials were emplaced before the lighter materials near the top. ==In popular culture==