Moon's biggest crater exposes its hidden lower crust
Friday - Mar 05, 2010, 05:50pm (GMT+5.5)
Washington, March 5 (ANI): Reports indicate that the biggest and deepest crater on the Moon can provide glimpses of the hidden lower crust of Earth's natural satellite. Shortly after the Moon formed, an asteroid smacked into its southern hemisphere and gouged out a truly enormous crater, the South Pole-Aitken basin, almost 1,500 miles across and more than five miles deep.
Asteroid bombardment over billions of years has left the lunar surface pockmarked with craters of all sizes, and covered with solidified lava, rubble, and dust.
Glimpses of the original surface, or crust, are rare, and views into the deep crust are rarer still.
Fortunately, a crater on the edge of the South Pole-Aitken basin may provide just such a view.
According to Noah Petro of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, "We believe the central part of the Apollo Basin may expose a portion of the Moon's lower crust. If correct, this may be one of just a few places on the Moon where we have a view into the deep lunar crust, because it's not covered by volcanic material as many other such deep areas are."
"Just as geologists can reconstruct Earth's history by analyzing a cross-section of rock layers exposed by a canyon or a road cut, we can begin to understand the early lunar history by studying what's being revealed in Apollo," he said.
Petro and his team made the discovery with the Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3), a NASA instrument on board India's Chandrayaan-1 lunar-orbiting spacecraft.
Analysis of the light (spectra) in images from this instrument revealed that portions of the interior of Apollo have a similar composition to the impact melt in the South Pole-Aitken (SPA) basin.
As you go deeper into the Moon, the crust contains minerals have greater amounts of iron. When the Moon first formed, it was largely molten.
Minerals containing heavier elements, like iron, sank down toward the core, and minerals with lighter elements, like silicon, potassium, and sodium, floated to the top, forming the original lunar crust.
"The asteroid that created the SPA basin probably carved through the crust and perhaps into the upper mantle. The impact melt that solidified to form the central floor of SPA would have been a mixture of all those layers," said Petro.
"We expect to see that it has slightly more iron than the bottom of Apollo, since it went deeper into the crust. This is what we found with M3," he said.
"However, we also see that this area in Apollo has more iron than the surrounding lunar highlands, indicating Apollo has uncovered a layer of the lunar crust between what is typically seen on the surface and that in the deepest craters like SPA," he added. (ANI)
| Other Articles: |
 |
'Mischievous' gut bugs could be making you fat (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Computers 'understand women more than men' (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Women of greater genetic diversity have more sex partners (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Evidence of sea ice extending to equator 715 mln yrs ago hints at "snowball Earth" (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Scientists discover most massive form of antimatter to date (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Now, You Tube videos to come with captions for deaf people (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Mars Express smoothly skims past enigmatic Phobos (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Soon, helicopter that would investigate nuclear disasters (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Experimental vaccine shows promise against chikungunya (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Lizard moms pick larger mates to have sons, smaller for daughters (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Exotic winter-flowering plants keep bees busy during cold months (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Lava likely made river-like meandering channel on Mars (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Diabetes 'leads to diminished brain power' (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Da Vinci's huge 'horse-that-never-was' proven feasible (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Asteroid killed off the dinos, concludes international scientific panel (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Transcendental Meditation activates brain's natural ground state (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
The crowding effect is anything but random, say experts (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Key cause of chronic leukemia progression identified (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Protein inhibits aging in fruit flies (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Gene that affects susceptibility to TB (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Less small talk and more substantive conversations make for a happy life (5th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Top 5 ways to mess with Earth's day (4th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Definitions of 'had sex' not consistent (4th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Scientists claim to have caught the building blocks of our solar system (4th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Norepinephrine better than dopamine for shock patients (4th Mar, 2010) |
|