As one of the coldest places in the solar system, Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, is also one of the most dynamic. A new collection of 13 studies about Titan reveal previously undetected craters, rivers, and have provided maps of its surface and interior.

The studies have also revealed new details about the moon’s eerie 29.5-Earth-year-long seasonal cycle.

The findings come from 8 years of observations by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft in the Saturn system. Ralph Lorenz, from John Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory, co-authored the new studies published in the journal Planetary and Space Science.

Cassini’s tour of Saturn began in July 2004 and showcased the hazy clouds made up of ethane and methane that shrouded Titan’s lake-covered north pole. In 2009, the haze layer dropped, which allowed astronomers to use Cassini’s optical and infrared instruments to probe the moon.

The dynamic atmospheric veil has allowed Cassini to partially map Titan, which is marked by craters left by asteroids, comets, and meteorites. Planetary scientists have identified a strange, ring-shaped feature called Paxsi on August 25th, 2009. It wasn’t until 2012 that it was confirmed that this was a 75-mile wide impact crater.

Other craters on Titan are between 1 billion and 200 hundred million years old. This indicates that the surface of Titan is relatively young. The surface is studded with lakes and rivers in which liquid hydrocarbons flow. Ethane and methane are found in gaseous form on Earth but on Titan, where surface temperatures hover at around -291˚F (93.7˚K), the compounds coalesce into liquids.

Lorenz hopes to launch a nuclear-powered robotic boat in 2016 called the Titan Mare Explorer (TiME) into the Sea of Ligeia.

Titan’s atmosphere is twice as thick as the Earth’s, making it difficult for astronomical instruments to image its surface in the visible light spectrum. Researchers had to combine several image data sets to get the most accurate map of Titan yet.

Doppler tracking has allowed them to measure Titan’s gravitational field, which has given the researchers an idea of the internal composition of Titan. The layers include a water-ice crust, subsurface ocean, a shell of high-pressure and a rocky interior.

[via Wired, images via NASA]