Callisto's surface shows its age. While probably
formed at the same time as Io, the
difference between the surfaces of these two moons of Jupiter
could hardly be greater. Io's
surface is young, shows practically no impact craters, and is
continually being repaved by the lava
exploding from its many large volcanoes.
Callisto's
surface is old, shows the highest density of impact craters in
the Solar System, and harbors no
volcanoes or even any large mountains. Callisto's
surface is one large ice-field, laced with cracks and craters
from billions of years of collisions with interplanetary debris.
The high-resolution vertical band in the above mosaic
was taken by the robot spacecraft Galileo
currently orbiting Jupiter. The
rest of the mosaic was compiled from pictures taken by the Voyager spacecraft
which passed the Callisto
in 1979.