Dominating the bottom center of this image is north Mare Nectaris and the shadow filled grand crater Theophilus (104km dia.) left of the mare. In this image we see the sun catching the very tip of the tallest central peak in Theophilus (4400m) and the interior of the far west wall. Can you imagine standing on that central peak, seeing the sun just clearing the east wall? What an amazing sight! East of Theophilus is a smaller shadow filled crater, Madler (29km) with a bright ray extending to the southeast. Farther east we come to some interesting low mounds and then a crater half filled with shadow with a smaller crater on the west side. This is Isadorus (43km) and the smaller one is Isadorus A (10km). Slightly farther on is the crater Capella with the nearly vertical Vallis Capella cutting through it like a 114km scar.
Apollo 11 got an image (image AS11-42-6232) almost at the same lighting looking back at a shadow filled Theophilus over Capella in the foreground, Isadorus behind it and Madler just in front of the big crater. You can see this on the Theophilus crater Wikipedia page.
In the image here you can see the radial splash marks around Theophilus from the great impact along with hundreds (thousands?) of small secondary craters as small as 1km here, especially south of Madler. Also south and east of Madler is a beautiful large ghost crater, Daguarre (48km) on the floor of the mare. This crater is older than the Mare being Pre-Imbrian (as old as 4.5 b.y.) about half a billion years older than Mare Nectaris
At the top center of the image is a small pear-shaped crater in shadow, Torricelli (24km) a ‘must see’ when you are in the area. It sits off-center in a large ring of low mountains well seen here. East of Capella you will see some roughly parallel rimae going from top to bottom in this image cutting right through the large crater Gutenberg (77km) just east of the mare. These are the Rimae Gutenberg some 340 km long.
There’s a lot of topography that can be enjoyed here and I invite you to explore.

