The dark and relatively featureless lunar plains which can clearly be seen are called maria (Latin for "seas"). They were believed by ancient astronomers to be filled with water. They are now known to be vast solidified pools of ancient basaltic lava.
The dark flat areas on the moon's surface are called Maria. The singular form of Maria is mare, which means sea. Although there are no seas on the moon, this is the term used to describe these darker areas. Approximately 16 percent of the moon' surface is covered with Maria. Most of these Maria are visible on the near-side of the moon.
They are called [MAR-e-uh], which is the plural of mare, which is Latin for "sea".
The dark spots are called Maria and they are dry lowland areas made of dark rock.
They are not actually dark seas. The craters on the moon have a sea like appearance and are known as lunar Maria.
Dark areas are crater shadows. Light areas are non crater areas.
The dark parts are called lunar maria. They are large basaltic plains.
This answer is for the surface of the Moon, not as viewed from Earth. [See related question]
The darkest part of the Moon is the Maria.
They're called "mare" (two syllables, pronounced "MAH-ray"), which is Latin and Italian for "oceans".
they're not patches, they're craters. so they're called craters
The dark patches on the moon were once thought to be seas and are called maria (Latin for `seas`). These are not actual seas containing water but are plains formed by ancient volcanic eruptions on the lunar surface.
maria,seas
A "Maria", which is translated into "sea".
The lunar maria (pronounced /ˈmɑri.ə/; singular: mare, two syllables /ˈmɑreɪ/[1]) are large, dark, basaltic plains on Earth's Moon, formed by ancient volcanic eruptions. They were dubbed maria, Latin for "seas", by early astronomers who mistook them for actual seas
When the moon appears completely dark it is called a new moon.
Dark maira of seas
The dark patches on the moon were once thought to be seas and are called maria (Latin for `seas`). These are not actual seas containing water but are plains formed by ancient volcanic eruptions on the lunar surface.
Maria. The dark patches on the moon were once thought to be seas and are called maria (Latin for `seas`). These are not actual seas containing water but are plains formed by ancient volcanic eruptions on the lunar surface. -RoryHem
Large dark areas on the Moon are called "maria", Latin for "seas", because the ancients who observed the Moon with the naked eye thought that they resembled the seas that they were familiar with.
The moon has plains,mountains,and many craters. The moon also has unactive volcanoes and dark spots called seas.
He thought they were seas. He called them maria (Latin for sea). Today scientists still call the dark, flat parts maria. Marias were formed when magma flowed through the surface of the moon. The magma cooled and became flat and dark.
Maria isn't a name of a moon, though it's what the dark areas on our own moon are called which were once though to be seas.
The dark and relatively featureless lunar plains which can clearly be seen with the naked eye are called maria (singular mare), Latin for seas, since they were believed by ancient astronomers to be filled with water. These are now known to be vast solidified pools of ancient basaltic lava
maria,seas
A "Maria", which is translated into "sea".
Seas (or mares) - because they were first thought of as bodies of water.
this means that there is a preferably dark spot on the moon or seas of the moon or plains on the moon