NASA unveils image of Mercury unlike any you've ever seen

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Tiny Mercury, the innermost planet of the solar system, may look to the human eye like Earth's moon. But appearances can be deceiving.

Instruments aboard NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft, currently orbiting Mercury, reveal a rich variety of chemicals, minerals and physical features, a new image of the planet shows.

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The false-color view depicts variations in the composition of Mercury's rocks.

"It's an oddball planet," David Blewett, with the Applied Physics Laboratory at Johns Hopkins University, told reporters at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Boston last week.

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Mercury is the smallest of the solar system's eight planets (the dwarf planet Pluto is no longer is considered a full-fledged planet), but its most dense. It also sports a global magnetic field like Earth's, a feature Venus and Mars lack.

In the image, released by NASA on Friday, the giant Caloris impact basin appears near the top, filled with orange-toned volcanic plains. The small orange and tan spots are places where materials have been deposited by volcanic eruptions.

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Not pictured are ice and organic matter deposits discovered inside Mercury's permanently shadowed polar craters.

MESSENGER completed its year-long primary mapping mission in March 2012 and presently is making more detailed surveys.

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This post originally appeared at Discovery News. It has been republished with permission.

Pictured at top: the planet Mercury, as mapped by the NASA MESSENGER probe, in color. The color variation signifies the rich, varying composition of rocks on the small world's surface | Via NASA/JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY APPLIED PHYSICS LABORATORY/CARNEGIE INSTITUTION OF WASHINGTON

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