homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Alien debris found in lunar craters

Well the title may be a little flashy, but here’s what it’s about: some highly unusual minerals have been found at the centers of impact craters on the moon. Geologists working on the case believe that they may be the shattered remains of the space rocks that made the craters, but didn’t exhume any material […]

Mihai Andrei
May 27, 2013 @ 4:56 am

share Share

Well the title may be a little flashy, but here’s what it’s about: some highly unusual minerals have been found at the centers of impact craters on the moon. Geologists working on the case believe that they may be the shattered remains of the space rocks that made the craters, but didn’t exhume any material from the Moon’s crust.

copernic

The foreign matter is probably asteroid debris, but some of it can even be from Earth – which is known to throw up its fair share of material as it gets hit by asteroids.

Interestingly enough, the discovery of this material didn’t come from analyzing the craters themselves, but rather by looking at a computer model of how meteorite impacts affect the Moon. To be more specific, researchers simulated a high-angle, exceptionally slow impacts — at least slow compared to possible impact speeds. What they found took them completely by surprise.

“Nobody has done it at such high resolution,” said planetary scientist Jay Melosh of Purdue University. Melosh and his colleagues published a paper on the discovery in the May 26 online issue of the journal Nature Geoscience.

They found that when the impact is slow enough (that means speeds of under 43,000 kph), the rocks which are hit don’t really vaporize, as was previously believed. Instead, the mass gets shattered into a rain of debris that is then swept back down the crater sides and piles up in the crater’s central peak.

In the case of the Copernic crater, depicted above, which is estimated to be about 800 million years old, the foreign material stands out because it contains minerals called spinels. Spinel is a magnezium/aluminum mineral that only forms at great pressures, like in the Earth’s mantle, for example (or even in the Moon’s mantle). But spinels are also relatively common in some asteroids which are fragments of broken or failed planets from earlier days of our solar system.

Via Wikipedia

Spinel.Via Wikipedia

Judging by these results, scientists now believe that the unusual minerals observed in the central peaks of many lunar impact craters are not lunar natives, but imports.

“An origin from within the Moon does not readily explain why the observed spinel deposits are associated with craters like Tycho and Copernicus instead of the largest impact basins,” writes Arizona State University researcher Erik Asphaug in a commentary on the paper. “Excavation of deep-seated materials should favor the largest cratering events.”

If true, this also means that pockets of material from the early Earth might be in cold storage on the moon, says Asphaug.

“Even more provocative,” explains Asphaug, “is the suggestion that we might someday find Earth’s protobiological materials, no longer available on our geologically active and repeatedly recycled planet, in dry storage up in the lunar ‘attic’.”

Via Discovery

share Share

A Huge, Lazy Black Hole Is Redefining the Early Universe

Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have discovered a massive, dormant black hole from just 800 million years after the Big Bang.

Proba-3: The Budget Mission That Creates Solar Eclipses on Demand

Now scientists won't have to travel from one place to another to observe solar eclipses. They can create their own eclipses lasting for hours.

GeoPicture of the week: Biggest crystals in the world

Known as Cueva de los Cristales (Cave of Crystals), this hidden chamber in Mexico holds some of the largest natural crystals ever discovered. The translucent pillars, some as long as telephone poles and as wide as tree trunks, make for an eerie underground landscape, seemingly crafted by giants. But there’s no magic involved, just some […]

This rare mineral is older than the Earth

Krotite is a cosmic relic, one of the oldest minerals in the Solar System, formed under fiery conditions in the early protoplanetary disk.

Researchers find evidence of hot water on Mars -- in a rock on Earth

A zircon crystal from a Martian meteorite unlocks secrets of a water-rich, dynamic Mars 4.45 billion years ago.

Meet the world's rarest mineral. It was found only once

A single gemstone from Myanmar holds the title of Earth's rarest mineral, kyawthuite.

Massive exploding methane craters are tearing Siberia apart and scientists finally know why

Scientists uncover the mechanics behind Siberia's explosive craters as warming drives methane release.

Giant 160-million-year-old tadpole sheds new light on frog evolution

Amphibian fossils, particularly those capturing larval stages, are exceptionally rare due to tadpoles’ soft, delicate bodies, which are highly prone to decay.

Why does nature keep making perfect cubical pyrite crystals?

There's a lof of chemistry wisdom in this "fool's gold."

Clinoptilolite: the unusual mineral used as protection after Chornobyl

This tongue-twister of a mineral has extraordinary uses, including nuclear disaster cleanups.