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    Moon's Scarred Crust Hints at Recent Activity, Scientists Say

    The moon's crust was apparently active far more recently than previously believed, scientists say.

    These new findings raise questions about how the moon formed and evolved, researchers said.

    Although the Earth's crust is still shifting, driven by the churning semimolten rock underneath it, researchers had thought the moon had cooled off much too long ago to still have any such tectonic activity. For instance, the youngest known tectonic features on the lunar landscape until now — small cliffs in the lunar highlands resulting from wrinkling of the surface as the moon's interior cooled and shrunk — are thought to be less than 1 billion years old, although by how much is uncertain.

    Now, images collected by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter hints the moon has probably seen tectonic activity within the last 50 million years.

    In these photos, researchers spotted a dozen or so narrow, trenchlike features known as graben in the lunar highlands and in the dark plains of volcanic rock known as the mare basalts. Graben are essentially troughs with two faults or cracks in the surface on either side of them. They are thought to have formed as the lunar crust was stretched. [10 Coolest Moon Discoveries]

    "Overall on the moon, you have this contracting, shrinking environment, but in some places, apparently there's this stretching extension of the crust," said study lead author Thomas Watters, a planetary scientist at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington.

    The graben the scientists detected, which reach up to about 1,640 feet (500 meters) wide and 1.1 miles (1.8 kilometers) long, appear relatively pristine. This suggests they formed recently — otherwise, they would be marred more often by craters from meteor impacts over time.

    "We think they're less than 50 million years old, but they could be 10 million years old, could be 1 million years old, could have happened 40 years ago," Watters told SPACE.com. "The intriguing picture that's emerging of the moon is that there is recent geological activity going on."

    Moonquakes detected by seismic sensors installed during the Apollo missions support the notion of recent activity on the moon, researchers added. All in all, the moon's interior may still be hot.

    "The moon may not only have been tectonically active recently, but may still be tectonically active today," Watters said.

    Models of how the moon cooled over time suggest it was totally molten after its formation, and that it should now be contracting as it cools, forcing the surface to wrinkle. However, if this was true, such compression would have suppressed the creation of graben — these ditches typically form when the crust stretches, not crinkles.

    Instead, these findings suggest the moon was not completely molten after it was formed. If this were the case, the moon would not contract strongly enough to suppress the emergence of graben.

    "Currently, a popular idea for how the moon formed is that it was completely molten in the beginning— after a Mars-size object hit Earth very early in its history, the debris cloud from the surviving material formed the moon," Watters said. "This may lend support to alternative scenarios that the moon was not completely molten when it formed, that only part of it was, forming a magma ocean."

    Future research can look for more graben in Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter photos once the satellite finishes imaging the moon, Watters said. He and his colleagues detailed their findings online Feb. 19 in the journal Nature Geoscience.

    Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter@Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

     
    • TTown  •  3 mths ago
      It is curious how the same side always faces the earth, i.e. it's rotation matches it's orbital period.
      • Ryan 3 mths ago
        it orbits, but it doesn't "rotate". it is tidally locked. that is why the same side always faces the earth. if it rotated, that wouldn't be the case.
      • Jacques Poutine 3 mths ago
        the moon wobbles but it doesn't rotate.
      • whatever 3 mths ago
        The moon does rotate, but the rotational period is equal to it's orbital period. So from our vantage point it looks like it does not roate, but if you were to look at the moon and earth orbits from aboev, you would see that it does rotate. Or if you were to stand on the moon for a month, you would see that you do rotate. The stars would rise and set like on earth, juut at a much slower rate.

        Most moons, rotate very slowly and mostly have the same side facing their host planets. It's casued by tidal friction and the fact that the planet is much more massive than the moon. The tidal forces take energy away from the moon at a faster rate becasue the moons are smaller.

        Google it and you'll find a more detailed explanation.
    • B Lang  •  3 mths ago
      Good on you Lunar Recon Orbiter, making us rethink our preconceptions and learn more about our solar system. Money well spent says I.
    • SeerOfDreams  •  Derry, New Hampshire  •  3 mths ago
      Recent = 50 million years. It's funny how definition of some words change when you start talking about the history of the universe.
    • Walker  •  Hoople, North Dakota  •  3 mths ago
      When the Apollo astronauts went to the moon, they left a reflector on the surface that has been used to "precisely" measure the distance from the earth to the moon by bouncing a laser beam off of it. We have been previously told that the distance from the earth to the moon has been increasing by an inch per year. Since we now believe that the moon is geologically active, does that mean that we have really been measuring the shrinkage of the moon's surface?
      • YourOpiniondsntmatter2Me 3 mths ago
        Thats a very insightful comment. I agree.
      • James Dogue 3 mths ago
        No probably not. The shrinkage rate would be orders of magnitude less than the slow increase in the orbital diameter. In fact, the shrinkage rate is small enough that it would be lost in the data from that particular instrument, well below the noise threshold, due to the minute value it presents.
      • Not Here 3 mths ago
        The finding that the Moon is slowly getting farther from the Earth by measureable amounts is credited to a Navy Harbormaster in the 1920's whose job it was to maintain the records of the tides that stretched back a Century. From the recrded measurements he was able to show mathematically that the moon was moving away. The NASA laser experiment merely confirmed his finding.
    • william  •  Eureka, Montana  •  3 mths ago
      yea, only 50 million years ago. I thought I felt something that day.
      • Benjamin 3 mths ago
        hahahahhahahahahahhhahahahahahhahah.long message hahahahaahhahhhahhhahhhahh
    • magicpat38  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      The little green men have been digging a drainage ditch for their potties.
      • Benjamin 3 mths ago
        THEY LIVE!.......................
        NO THEY REALLY DONT !
      • Dean 3 mths ago
        I keep trying to tell you non educated people they are not green they are purple.....with blue noses.
    • Locke  •  3 mths ago
      "The moon may not only have been tectonically active recently, but may still be tectonically active today," Watters said.''

      I'm guessing that building a moon base on a fault line would probably be a mistake.
    • James Dogue  •  3 mths ago
      Its near proximity to the earth "hint" that tidal forces between the two planetary bodies might cause the build up of stresses in the moon's crust, which hints that periodically, those stresses might be released in the form of tectonic movement.. (hint hint)
    • Echo  •  3 mths ago
      This....Changes everything.
    • Robert  •  Richmond, Virginia  •  3 mths ago
      Global warming is melting the cheese on the moon.
    • Go4apass  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      shrinkage because its cold in space. I know the feeling whenever I go swimming
    • BrandiH  •  3 mths ago
      Hey, I learned something! I was not aware that "crinkle" was a scientific term. :-)
    • Bayou Man  •  Norco, Louisiana  •  3 mths ago
      Maybe we should send the Russians up to find more plant life.
    • Ari  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Amazing, not one comment complaining that NASA is wasting tax-payer dollars! Hurray! looks like there's hope for this country after all! kudos to all the intelligent comments below! :)
    • Solar Child  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      Guaranteed two sources of energy on the moon. Solar on the light side and geothermal on the dark side. These facts could contribute to additional need for batteries for energy storage.
    • MarkC  •  Greenville, South Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      Recent activity? Newt was up there surveying sites for his moon base club.
    • Otto Pilot  •  Spring Branch, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      I prefer a much more flaky crust. I also like hot'n'spicy on occasion.
    • Slayer  •  Southfield, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      Or ALIENS!
    • Scootter  •  Troy, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      Wow , A great article. Exciting to me. Such a shame that so many education challenged bloggers are out of their cages today.
    • ilikepbandj  •  3 mths ago
      Come on its a hollow alien base, we all saw Apollo 18 footage......and we all want our money back.....even the 1.06 it cost me on redbox was a waste.
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