This image shows the region featured in ESA’s Mars Express video journey around Flaugergues Crater.
As with this image, the video is based on data from Mars Express’s High Resolution Stereo Camera. It begins by following a swathe of ground enclosed by two sloping and roughly parallel escarpments named Scylla Scopulus and Charybdis Scopulus; skirts past the large Bakhuysen Crater; and ends by looping around the even larger Flaugergues Crater.
All of these features are labelled here. The blue line marks the location and direction of motion of the camera perspective in the full-length (broadcast quality version) of the video.
North is up, and the image is centred at 20°S/17°E.
View the short version of the video here, and follow the link to the broadcast quality version at the end of the caption.
[Image description: A colour map of a region on Mars, shown in shades of reddish‑brown. The terrain is covered with many circular impact craters of different sizes. Some craters are deep and sharply defined, while others look worn down with softer edges. The map is oriented with north at the top. Along the left and right edges, latitude and longitude markings are shown. Several major features are labelled directly on the map in white text: Flaugergues (a large, roughly circular crater located in the upper‑right area of the map), Noachis (a region name in the upper‑left), Terra (marked across the lower‑left area), Bakhuysen (another large crater positioned below the centre, Mosa Vallis and Evros Vallis (valley systems near the top), Wislicenus (another large crater) and Scylla Scopulus and Charybdis Scopulus (parallel cliffs). A white rectangular outline highlights part of Flaugergues Crater, marking an 'elevated terrain' area and a 'channel' feature inside the crater wall. Another smaller white rectangle near the lower‑right marks an 'ejecta' region. A turquoise curved line traces a path from the bottom of the map (marked Start) to the upper‑middle area (marked End). The line bends smoothly and crosses several labelled regions and terrain features along the way. A scale bar in the lower‑right corner shows a length of 100 kilometres. The entire map is placed on a solid brown background, slightly lighter than the map itself.]