A good one from apod https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap230505.html
Shackleton crater lies at the lunar south pole. Peaks along its 21 kilometre diameter are in sunlight, but Shackleton’s floor is in dark permanent shadow. Still, this image of the shadowed rim wall and floor of Shackleton crater was captured from ShadowCam, an instrument on board the Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter (KPLO) launched in August 2022. About 200 times more sensitive than, for example, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter’s Narrow Angle Camera, ShadowCam was designed to image the permanently shadowed regions of the lunar surface. Avoiding direct sunlight, those regions are expected to be reservoirs of water-ice and other volatiles deposited by ancient cometary impacts and useful to future Moon missions.
In this stunningly detailed ShadowCam image, an arrow marks the track made by a single boulder rolling down Shackleton crater’s wall. The image scale is indicated at the bottom of the frame.

