Rousillon Rupes

Rousillon Rupes is a scarp (rupes is Latin for "cliff") on the surface of the Uranian moon Titania named after "Bertram, count of Rousillon" (an Elisabethan English misspelling for Roussillon) in William Shakespeare's comedy All's Well That Ends Well.

[1] The 402 km long feature is a normal fault situated near the equator and running perpendicular to it.

The scarp cuts impact craters, which probably means that it was formed at a relatively late stage of moon's evolution,[2] when the interior of Titania expanded and its ice crust cracked as a result.

[3] Rousillon Rupes has only few crater superimposed on it, which also implies its relatively young age.

This article about an extraterrestrial geological feature is a stub.

Rousillon Rupes are at the bottom just above Ursula crater.