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New Stunning Close-Up Images Of Pluto Dazzle Scientists

(CBS NEWS) -- NASA unveiled a fresh batch of Pluto pictures Thursday, revealing stunning vistas that include chaotic ice mountains, possible dunes of some sort, nitrogen ice flows and networks of valleys that defy easy explanation.

The photographs, stored aboard the New Horizon's spacecraft since its historic July 14 flyby and downlinked over the past week, show ancient, heavily-cratered terrain adjacent to younger, much smoother plains and backlit shots of the small world's thin atmosphere showing multiple haze layers.

Most of the photos in the latest release, taken while New Horizons was about 50,000 miles from Pluto, show surface features just a half-mile across.

"Pluto is showing us a diversity of landforms and complexity of processes that rival anything we've seen in the solar system," Alan Stern, the New Horizons principal investigator, said in a NASA release.

nh-chaos-region-9-10-15
In the center of this 300-mile (470-kilometer) wide image of Pluto from NASA's New Horizons spacecraft is a large region of jumbled, broken terrain on the northwestern edge of the vast, icy plain informally called Sputnik Planum, to the right. The smallest visible features are 0.5 miles (0.8 kilometers) in size. (NASA)
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Mosaic of high-resolution images of Pluto, sent back from NASA's New Horizons spacecraft from Sept. 5 to 7, 2015. The image is dominated by the informally-named icy plain Sputnik Planum, the smooth, bright region across the center. This image also features a tremendous variety of other landscapes surrounding Sputnik. (NASA)

"If an artist had painted this Pluto before our flyby, I probably would have called it over the top, but that's what is actually there."

New Horizons stopped beaming back pictures shortly after the flyby to focus on sending home data on energetic particles, the solar wind and space dust. Photo transmission resumed last Saturday.

NASA said new shots of Pluto, it's large moon Charon and smaller moons Nix and Hydra will be posted Friday on the spacecraft's Long Range Reconnaissance Imager -- LORRI -- website.

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