This article is about the crater on 4 Vesta. For the vestal virgin Veneneia, see
vestal virgins.
Outline of
Rheasilvia (top center), with Veneneia (bottom center) underlying it
Veneneia/vɛnɪˈniːə/ is the second-largest crater on asteroid
4 Vesta, at 52°S latitude. 395 kilometres (245 mi)[1] in diameter, it is 70% of the equatorial diameter of the asteroid, and one of the
largest craters in the Solar System. It is at least 2 billion years old, and possibly as old as 4.2 billion years.[2] However, it is overlain and partially obliterated by the even larger
Rheasilvia. It was discovered by the
Dawn spacecraft in 2011. It is named after Venēneia, one of the founding
vestal virgins.[3]
Vesta has a series of troughs in the northern hemisphere concentric to Veneneia. These are believed to be large-scale fractures resulting from the impact. The largest is
Saturnalia Fossae, approx. 39 km wide and > 400 km long.[4]