This rock was formed from
a meteorite impact on the moon. Shiny, black,
impact-generated glass was
splashed on the side of
this rock by the impact.
Between 1969 and 1972
six Apollo missions brought
back 382 kilograms (842
pounds) of lunar rocks, core
samples, pebbles, sand and
dust from the lunar surface.
The six space flights
returned 2200 separate
samples from six different
exploration sites on the
Moon. In addition, three
automated Soviet space-
craft returned important
samples totaling 300 grams
(approximately 3/4 pound)
from three other lunar sites.
The lunar sample building at
Johnson Space Center is the
chief repository for the
Apollo samples. The lunar
sample laboratory is where
pristine lunar samples are
prepared for shipment to
scientists and educators.
Nearly 1000 samples are distributed each year for
research and teaching
projects. Study of rock and
soil samples from the Moon
continues to yield useful
information about the early
history of the Moon, the
Earth, and the inner solar
system. Recent computer
models indicate that the
Moon could have been
formed from the debris
resulting from the Earth
being struck a glancing
blow by a planetary body
about the size of Mars. The
chemical composition of the
Moon, derived from studies
of lunar rocks, is compatible
with this theory of the origin
of the Moon. We have
learned that a crust formed
on the Moon 4.4 billion years
ago. This crust formation,
the intense meteorite
bombardment occurring
afterward, and subsequent
lava outpourings are
recorded in the rocks.
Radiation spewed out by
the Sun since the formation
of the Moon's crust, was
trapped in the lunar soil as
a permanent record of solar
activity throughout this time.
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11.27.2006: This report is from research material located
at Planetary Materials Curation at NASA-JSC (Johnson Space
Center).
1. The Moon is not a primordial object; it is an evolved
terrestrial planet with internal zoning similar to that
of Earth. Before Apollo, the state of the Moon was a
subject of almost unlimited speculation. We now know
that the Moon is made of rocky material that has been
variously melted, erupted through volcanoes, and crushed
by meteorite impacts. The Moon possesses a thick crust
(60 km), a fairly uniform lithosphere (60-1000 km), and
a partly liquid asthenosphere (1000-1740 km); a small
iron core at the bottom of the asthenosphere is possible
but unconfirmed. Some rocks give hints for ancient
magnetic fields although no planetary field exists
today.
2. The Moon is ancient and still preserves an early
history (the first billion years) that must be common to
all terrestrial planets. The extensive record of
meteorite craters on the Moon, when calibrated using
absolute ages of rock samples, provides a key for
unravelling time scales for the geologic evolution of
Mercury, Venus, and Mars based on their individual
crater records. Photogeologic interpretation of other
planets is based largely on lessons learned from the
Moon. Before Apollo, however, the origin of lunar impact
craters was not fully understood and the origin of
similar craters on Earth was highly debated.
3. The youngest Moon rocks are virtually as old as the
oldest Earth rocks. The earliest processes and events
that probably affected both planetary bodies can now
only be found on the Moon. Moon rock ages range from
about 3.2 billion years in the maria (dark, low basins)
to nearly 4.6 billion years in the terrae (light, rugged
highlands). Active geologic forces, including plate
tectonics and erosion, continuously repave the oldest
surfaces on Earth whereas old surfaces persist with
little disturbance on the Moon.
4. The Moon and Earth are genetically related and formed
from different proportions of a common reservoir of
materials. The distinctively similar oxygen isotopic
compositions of Moon rocks and Earth rocks clearly show
common ancestry. Relative to Earth, however, the Moon
was highly depleted in iron and in volatile elements
that are needed to form atmospheric gases and water.
5. The Moon is lifeless; it contains no living
organisms, fossils, or native organic compounds.
Extensive testing revealed no evidence for life, past or
present, among the lunar samples. Even non-biological
organic compounds are amazingly absent; traces can be
attributed to contamination by meteorites.
6. All Moon rocks originated through high-temperature
processes with little or no involvement with water. They
are roughly divisible into three types: basalts,
anorthosites, and breccias. Basalts are dark lava rocks
that fill mare basins; they generally resemble, but are
much older than, lavas that comprise the oceanic crust
of Earth. Anorthosites are light rocks that form the
ancient highlands; they generally resemble, but are much
older than, the most ancient rocks on Earth. Breccias
are composite rocks formed from all other rock types
through crushing, mixing, and sintering during meteorite
impacts. The Moon has no sandstones, shales, or
limestones such as testify to the importance of
water-borne processes on Earth.
7. Early in its history, the Moon was melted to great
depths to form a "magma ocean." The lunar
highlands contain the remnants of early, low density
rocks that floated to the surface of the magma ocean.
The lunar highlands were formed about 4.4-4.6 billion
years ago by flotation of an early, feldspar-rich crust
on a magma ocean that covered the Moon to a depth of
many tens of kilometers or more. Innumerable meteorite
impacts through geologic time reduced much of the
ancient crust to arcuate mountain ranges between basins.
8. The lunar magma ocean was followed by a series of
huge asteroid impacts that created basins which were
later filled by lava flows. The large, dark basins such
as Mare Imbrium are gigantic impact craters, formed
early in lunar history, that were later filled by lava
flows about 3.2-3.9 billion years ago. Lunar volcanism
occurred mostly as lava floods that spread horizontally;
volcanic fire fountains produced deposits of orange and
emerald-green glass beads.
9. The Moon is slightly asymmetrical in bulk form,
possibly as a consequence of its evolution under Earth's
gravitational influence. Its crust is thicker on the far
side, while most volcanic basins -- and unusual mass
concentrations -- occur on the near side. Mass is not
distributed uniformly inside the Moon. Large mass
concentrations ("Mascons") lie beneath the
surface of many large lunar basins and probably
represent thick accumulations of dense lava. Relative to
its geometric center, the Moon's center of mass is
displaced toward Earth by several kilometers.
10. The surface of the Moon is covered by a rubble pile
of rock fragments and dust, called the lunar regolith,
that contains a unique radiation history of the Sun
which is of importance to understanding climate changes
on Earth. The regolith was produced by innumerable
meteorite impacts through geologic time. Surface rocks
and mineral grains are distinctively enriched in
chemical elements and isotopes implanted by solar
radiation. As such, the Moon has recorded four billion
years of the Sun's history to a degree of completeness
that we are unlikely to find elsewhere.
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