Outcrops at the edge of an impact crater on the floor of the much-larger Trouvelot Crater on the planet Mars, named for French astronomer, amateur entomologist, and artist &Eacute;tienne L&eacute;opold Trouvelot. Though he spent his latter years producing thousands of astronomical illustrations, M. Trouvelot is more (in)famous for his role in accidentally introducing the European gypsy moth to North America. In the late 1860s he imported gypsy moth eggs to his home in Medford, Massachusetts, intending to cross-breed silk-producing moths with the disease resistant pests. Some of the insects escaped from his backyard and began to spread and multiply. By now, the pests cause an&nbsp;estimated $868 million per year in damage&nbsp;to trees of North America.
M. Trouvelot&rsquo;s misfortune in his entomological endeavours led him to pursue a new career in astronomical observation and illustration, beginning in the 1870s (image credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona).