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Not
So Dead After All
Moon’s Escaping
Gases Expose Fresh Surface
November 08, 2006
Millions
of years – not billions Apollo images of the
D-shaped Ina structure indicate that gas releases may have
exposed fresh surfaces on the moon. The main image shows
very few craters within the depression. Low-angle
illumination (inset) reveals sharp features with little
evidence of weathering. Credit: NASA
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Far
from mature This false color composite image
indicates age and composition of lunar surface features.
Titanium basalts (blue) are exposed on the floor of Ina
structure and in the ‘fresh’ impact crater. Less
mature soils (based on spectral ratios) appear in green.
Credit:
NASA
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A fresh look at Apollo-era
images combined with recent spectral data leads researchers to
re-examine conventional wisdom about the Earth’s moon.
Several lines of evidence suggest that the moon may have seen
eruptions of interior gases as recently as 1 million years ago,
rather than 3 billion years ago – the date that had been
most widely accepted.
Conventional wisdom suggests
that the Earth’s moon has seen no widespread volcanic
activity for at least the last 3 billion years. Now, a fresh look
at existing data points to much more recent release of lunar
gases
The study, published in the
journal Nature by geologists Peter Schulz and Carlé
Pieters of Brown University and Matthew Staid of the Planetary
Science Institute, uses three distinct lines of evidence to
support the assertion that volcanic gas has been released from
the moon’s surface within the last 1 to 10 million years.
The researchers focus on a D-shaped area called the Ina structure
that was first recognized in images from Apollo missions.
The unusual sharpness of the
features first called Schultz’s attention to the area.
“Something that razor-sharp shouldn’t stay around
long. It ought to be destroyed within 50 million years,”
said Schulz. On Earth, wind and water quickly wear down freshly
exposed surface features. On the airless moon, constant
bombardment with tiny space debris accomplishes a similar result.
By comparing the fine-scale surface features within the Ina
structure to other areas on the moon with known ages, the team
was able to place its age at closer to 2 million years.
The scarcity of asteroid impact
craters on the surface within Ina provided a second line of
evidence for the feature’s relative youth. The researchers
identified only two clear impact craters larger than 30 meters on
the 8 square kilometers of the structure’s floor. This
frequency is about the same as at South Ray Crater, near the
Apollo 16 landing site. The surface material ejected from South
Ray Crater has long been used as a benchmark for dating other
features on the moon’s surface and most lunar scientists
studying these rocks agree on a date of approximately 2 million
years, based on cosmic ray exposure.
The third piece of support for
the authors’ hypothesis comes from comparing the spectral
signatures of deposits in the Ina depression to those from very
fresh craters. As lunar surface deposits weather, the wavelengths
of light they reflect change in predictable ways. Overall
reflectance, or albedo, gets less bright and the ratio of light
at 1,000 nm wavelengths to 750 nm wavelengths increases. Based on
these color ratios, the deposits on Ina’s floor are
exceptionally young – and possibly even newly exposed.
The appearance of the surface
at Ina does not indicate an explosive release of magma, which
would result in visible rays of ejecta surrounding a central
crater. Rather, it suggests a rapid release of gases, which would
have blown off the surface deposits, exposing less weathered
materials. This interpretation is particularly appealing because
Ina is located at the intersection of two linear
valleys or riles – like many geologically active
areas on Earth.
Ina also does not appear to be
alone. The authors identify at least four similar features
associated with the same system of rilles, as well as others in
neighboring rille systems. Although several kinds of evidence
support the authors’ conclusion that the moon is more
geologically active than previously thought, the only sure way to
resolve the question would be to collect samples at such sites.
“Ina and other similar features are great targets for
future exploration, by people or robots,” said G. Jeffrey
Taylor, a lunar researcher at the University of Hawaii. “They
might be the best place to get a good look at the interface
between the powdery regolith and the consolidated rock beneath.”
Over the years, says Schultz,
amateur astronomers have seen puffs or flashes of light coming
from the moon’s surface. Although most professional
observers have upheld the conclusion that the moon was inactive,
such sightings have kept open a window of doubt. A coordinated
observation campaign, including both professional and amateur
astronomers, would be one way to build additional evidence for
activity, says Schultz. A gas release itself would not be visible
for more than a second or so, but the dust it kicked up might
stay suspended for up to 30 seconds. With modern alert networks,
that’s long enough to move a professional telescope into
position to see what’s happening.
NASA’s Planetary Geology
and Geophysics Program supported this research. Peter Schultz and
Carlé Pieters are professors of geological science at
Brown University. Matthew Staid is a research scientist at the
Planetary Science Institute.
Source
/ Credit: Brown University
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