[meteorite-list] The Moon is a Harsh Witness

From: Darren Garrison <cynapse_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sat, 27 Jan 2007 15:20:10 -0500
Message-ID: <urcnr2dte0cpd9rna0s2prmkav2h29o629_at_4ax.com>

http://www.yubanet.com/artman/publish/article_50133.shtml

The Moon is a Harsh Witness

By: Trudy E. Bell, Science at NASA
Published: Jan 27, 2007 at 07:10

With binoculars, examine the rugged face of the Moon. It is pocked with
thousands of impact craters from interplanetary asteroids and comets. Ever
wonder why Earth, a much bigger target, apparently has so few craters? They're
so rare that a pristine example, the Barringer Meteor Crater in Arizona, is
actually a tourist attraction. Did Earth just get lucky and dodge the heavy
artillery?

No, throughout the history of the solar system, Earth was bombarded even more
than the Moon. But Earth is so geologically active that earthquakes, volcanoes,
and plain old weather are continually crushing, melting, and reshaping its
crust. In short, Earth is continually destroying evidence of its past, including
evidence of ancient impact craters. Almost all the terrestrial craters that have
been identified-only some 170 at last count-have been so eroded that essential
clues have been erased.

Not so the Moon. In fact, according to Paul Spudis, a senior planetary scientist
at Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory, one of NASA's best
reasons for returning to the Moon is to learn more about Earth.

"The Moon is a witness plate for Earth," declares Spudis, borrowing an apt term
from weapons research. When scientists want to measure the type, amount, and
pattern of damage done by an explosion, they set up diagnostic "witness plates"
of various materials nearby to register the impact of shrapnel and radiation.

"Earth and the Moon occupy the same position in the solar system," Spudis
explains. "While Earth is a very dynamic planet, the Moon is a fossil world with
no atmosphere. So the Moon preserves a record of the early history of the solar
system that is no longer readable on Earth."

That's not just speculation. In the early 1970s, the astronauts on the last
three Apollo missions (15, 16, and 17) returned deep-drill core samples from
three different sites on the Moon. The cores drilled more than 2 meters into the
lunar regolith (the layer of broken rock and dust covering the Moon).

"The deepest samples brought up by those drill cores were 2 billion years old,
and largely unchanged since they were laid down," Spudis says. And what a
surprise recent re-analysis has revealed. "The lunar regolith traps particles
from the solar wind. And drill cores show that the solar wind had a different
chemical composition 2 billion years ago than it does today. There's no known
explanation for that in solar theory. But that discovery is crucial for
understanding the formation of Earth-and also the evolution of stars."

Another big question a return to the witness-plate Moon might help answer is,
What caused the sudden mass extinctions of life forms on Earth that mark the
ends of different geological eras?

The most famous is the so-called K-T extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs 65
million years ago, marking the end of the Mesozoic Era (the age of reptiles) and
the beginning of the Cenozoic Era (the age of mammals). Much evidence suggests
that an asteroid some 10 km wide slammed into Earth, creating such catastrophic
climate change that photosynthesizing green plants died, starving more than half
of all living beings worldwide; indeed, ground zero has been identified on
Mexico's Yucat?n Peninsula as the Chicxulub Crater, 160 km across.

There's evidence in the fossil record that such impacts occur periodically,
"once every 26 million years," says Spudis. "Not everyone agrees, but I think it
is pretty convincing."

Why would this happen? "Some theories are wild!" There might be a dark, distant
companion of the sun that periodically perturbs comets in the Oort Cloud, and
the comets rain down on Earth. Or perhaps the solar system as a whole is moving
in and out of the plane of the Milky Way galaxy, and this somehow triggers
periodic episodes of bombardment.

Before we get carried away with theory, however, "we need to establish whether
this really happens," Spudis cautions. Is Earth truly subjected to periodic
bombardment? Again, the Moon holds the key: Close-up study of the floors of
several hundred lunar craters could confirm or falsify a 26-million year period.
"We have to sample the stuff that got melted by the shock of impact, and
determine the craters' ages."

The Moon is a harsh-and reliable-witness for Earth.
Received on Sat 27 Jan 2007 03:20:10 PM PST


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