This appears in the same image as a half-face mesa identified earilier this year by anomalist Sam Kendall as a possible Cydonia-like face formation, appearing to be damaged or unfinished, whether by circumstance or by some deliberate design. Perhaps such a gesture of seeming incompleteness is not unlike the symbolic deliberacy that at times requires the imaging technique of taking half an image, inverting it, and placing the two halves together to create the whole, that is one of the centerpieces of the discoveries of George Haas and the Cydonia Institute.
For present lack of an official geographic name, I am calling this the "Turtleback Mesa" for the obvious rememblance to the shell of a turtle... I can't yet say there's anything anomalous or artificial in that resemblance, but what I can say...
....is that there seem to be some pretty blantant possible anomalies on top of it. They include the circled feature which conveys a striking impression of a walled enclosure with aligned features, which may prove to be three Egyptian-type pyramids in a large row...
There are other, less distinct traces of artificiality throughout the whole top of this mesa, and a good number of them may be framed by the surprisingly straight "streak" that seems as if to run the entire length of the mesa.