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    Rare Volcanoes Discovered On Far Side of the Moon

    Shielded from Earth-bound eyes, the far side of the moon is home to a rare set of dormant volcanoes that changed the face of the lunar surface, a new study finds.

    Data and photos from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) reveal the presence of now-dead silicate volcanoes, not the more common basaltic volcanoes that litter the moon's surface, researchers said.

    "Most of the volcanic activity on the moon was basaltic," primary author Brad Jolliff of Washington University told SPACE.com in an email. "Finding other volcanic types is interesting as it shows the geologic complexity and range of processes that operate on the moon, and how the moon's volcanism changed with time." [Photos of the dormant far side moon volcanoes]

    Searching the far side

    Because the moon's rotation has been affected by tidal forces between the Earth and the moon, only one side of the moon is visible from the Earth. The far side of the moon โ€” sometimes referred to inaccurately as the "dark side" โ€” was hidden from view until 1959, when Soviet Union's Luna 3 spacecraft took the first photos of the region.

    When NASA's Lunar Prospector probe circled the moon in 1998, it revealed a highly reflective plain lying between two ancient impact craters. Known as the Compton-Belkovich region, this part of the moon contains thorium and other silicate rocks, suggesting a more involved type of volcanic activity than that which created the moon's well-known dark plains of basaltic plains known as "maria," or "seas."

    But it wasn't until the LRO captured higher-resolution images for the region could this volcanic activity be confirmed. The spacecraft found a number of domelike features with steeply sloping sides โ€” telltale signs of lunar volcanoes.

    Jolliff said that the domes likely formed by lava probably came from deep within the moon. It flowed upward through cracks to pool just beneath the surface, where it pressed out to form large domes.

    Lava continued to work its way to the surface throughout the area, building other, smaller volcanic domes. Some areas then collapsed, creating the irregular depressions observed by LRO's camera, researchers said.

    The research is detailed in the July 24 edition of the journal Nature Geoscience.

    Rare volcanoes on the moon

    Most volcanoes, on Earth and off, are near other volcanoes. But the grouping in the Compton-Belkovich region is isolated.

    "This small volcanic complex occurs far away from the part of the moon where most of the volcanic activity was concentrated, and where other silicic volcanism occurred," Jolliff said. "That's a puzzle." [10 Coolest Moon Discoveries]

    Older, defunct volcanoes are not themselves uncommon. Scientists have known for years that volcanoes on the moon filled in craters to form the dark maria visible from Earth's surface. However, those lava flows are basaltic in nature.

    The team also used the Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment to confirm the type of rocks on the plain.

    "Very few minerals have an infrared spectrum that can explain Diviner's observations of Compton-Belkovich and the other nonbasaltic volcanoes on the moon," study co-author Timothy Glotch of Stony Brook University told SPACE.com via email.

    In fact, the rocks were silicate-rich.

    "We've known for awhile that the Compton-Belkovich had an unusually high thorium content," Glotch said. "Now we can positively say that that thorium is related to these silicic volcano materials."

    Volcanoes on the moon

    Last fall, Glotch, working with another team, was the first to identify nonbasaltic volcanoes on the near side of the moon. Due to their highly reflective surface, this group was also originally noticed by the Lunar Prospector.

    However, lava from the surrounding maria may have also concealed details of the volcanoes, so some details of the region's geologic history could have been hidden, researchers said. But the volcanoes on the far side have no maria nearby to hide their features. The complete view of the volcanism in the area lies open to examination.

    Similarly, they are surprisingly free from impact craters, which reveals a great deal about their age, researchers added.

    The early life of the solar system was violent, with rocks scarring the surface of the planets and their moons. Features that lack this scarring formed after things had calmed down.

    Jolliff and his team estimated the age of the moon's rare far side silicate volcanoes to be about 800 million years old. Such an age would extend the volcanic activity of the moon by 200 million years, they said.

    According to Glotch, the discovery of nonbasaltic volcanoes on the far side of the moon "shows that the moon is more compositionally diverse than we realized before this new age of lunar exploration."

    "As scientists, we're still digesting all this relatively new data and working to understand what it means in terms of lunar history."

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

     

    142 comments

    • joel  •  10 mths ago
      We should have been on the moon mining for minerals by now. Instead, we have a government that would rather fight a "war on terror" that has gone on for ten years now with an organization that numbers in the thousands. Spending billions to defend against people who live in third world conditions is a crime. The sooner we stop shooting up oil, the sooner we can leave that God forsaken place.
      • Thomas 10 mths ago
        I agree with your assessment of the terrestrial situation but I do have severe reservations about colonizing the Moon. The reason I have those is I used to watch the old 1970s SF TV show "Space: 1999", where the Moon gets blasted out of Earth's orbit due to improper storage of nuclear byproducts. I'm just afraid some idiot will have a station on the Moon complete with underground storage areas. One wrong move, and it's Doomsday!
      • His royal Highness 10 mths ago
        that was rediculous indeed.

        if we ever spent the time to mining the oceans we would get everything we need, its just space and star trickier think there is a future in space we haven't even touched the oceans.
        why are we looking out there inj space where its so expensive we would never ever get any return on our investments. just keep on dreaming you bunch of republicans
        that's how we got in this mess in the first place.
      • Noonsa 10 mths ago
        While I agree with Joel that the money is misspent, I'd say that the middle east isn't 'godforsaken' just because we're having trouble conquering it. Hardly fair, and you're blaming the victim. But yes, end the genocidal occupations!!
        And Dr.Ozie is right about the oceans. We have mysterious, dangerous, untapped oceans that we know next to NOTHING about.. right here on earth. Yet another avenue of research that could be explored if we stopped funding the military industrial complex.
    • TheGriffin  •  10 mths ago
      I'm dissapointed. I was hoping they'd say they found Transformers.
    • Marmont 1  •  10 mths ago
      Thats Cool....

      With this technology, we should be able to take some pics of ALL the equipment and previous Lunar visits....

      Anyone know if this HAS been done... ???

      Cheers
      • Marmont 1 10 mths ago
        I mean that once we vist the moon...we may want to use some of this stuff... if we can find it???
      • Berny 10 mths ago
        Most of it has fallen into disuse (dead batteries and so on) but it would be nice in a museum. By the way, we can see the landing sites from Earth base telescopes and we have pictures.
      • Loki 10 mths ago
        I would like to see those Berny please provide a link. It was to my understanding that due to atmosphere and so on that Earth based telescopes could see things the size of a football satdium on the moon and the lander modules are about the size of a 2 car garage. I would be pleased if I was wrong.
    • grenierjp  •  10 mths ago
      Every time there is a scientific article in Yahoo, I am dismayed by the crass ignorance of some postings - it seems some have stopped learning anything in science in grade 3, then they made up the rest from whatever books any crooks may have published: I wonder if we are not going back to the Middle Ages where old wives tales and hearsays were held up as truth.

      Science is based on facts. Scientists may gather facts together to create a theory, but theories are still based on facts - not on stories you believe because it was repeated by you friends.

      - The Moon has no "dark side" per se: just a Nearside and a Farside. All sides of the Moon receives sunshine for about half a month at a time.
      - The Moon is not completely known to us. Heck, we still discover things on Earth! But sending people on the Moon is expensive and not always cost-effective. So, we have to study it from afar.
      - The Moon is not hollow, but it is certainly very light in density (that is, compared to an Earth of the same size, the Earth would be heavier). When there is an earthquake here, the Earth does "resonate" until the seismic waves become too weak to be noticed. But the Earth is so big, and there are so many small-scale earthquakes, it is difficult to differentiate the resonance. On the Moon, the geology is really quiet, so a seismic wave can be picked up for a longer time. BTW, if the Moon was hollow, its weigth would be so low, it would not pull the tides on Earth as it does now.
      - According to FACTS, the Moon share many isotopes with the Earth, that means it was probably created from the Earth or at the same time as the Earth. That also means it can contain many elements found on Earth - including oxygen.

      OK, class is dismissed.
      • Mahon Mac 10 mths ago
        @ JP; Thank you for that very intelligent and well-thought-out argument. Unfortunately, it will be largely wasted on the scripture-babbling extremely-religious nutjobs and conspiracy-theory idiots who sometimes make up the overwhelming majority of readers/posters on the Yahoo news boards.
    • vdofun  •  10 mths ago
      Dormant volcanoes ? Does it mean there could be activity again someday?
      • master 10 mths ago
        the moons core is dead cold so no chance of that
      • The Mosser 10 mths ago
        So they should be called "extinct", not "dormant".
    • ...  •  10 mths ago
      did they find Pink Floyd
    • ErykBly  •  10 mths ago
      To those who ask the question "why don't we already know everything about what's on the moon given that astronauts went there several times 40 years ago" - You do realize that the surface area of the moon is approximately equal to the combined area of both North and South America, don't you?
    • CptCanada  •  10 mths ago
      Was expecting to read that they discovered a crashed Autobot spacecraft...
    • binladensaddambush  •  10 mths ago
      There no dark side to moon.
    • Daniel  •  10 mths ago
      pfft! i thought they had discovered the transformers on the dark side of the moon :P
    • r s s  •  10 mths ago
      so after all these moon trips, satellites, and 100s of billions spent, the scientists didn't know THIS much about the moon?
    • Mjollnir  •  10 mths ago
      Of course it's dormant......that's where the Decepticons are hiding!
    • R-III S  •  10 mths ago
      There is more going on than the government is telling ..with the moon
    • rico  •  10 mths ago
      Imagine hot cheese erupting from your pizza crust.
    • William  •  10 mths ago
      Why are so many people talking about the darkside of the moon? There's no darkside... the frontal and back part both get equal amounts of sunlight and are visible from earth...DOn't you think an amateur astrologist would have released such a finding as "ancient ruins and bases" already, if there actually were any?
    • Donovan So  •  10 mths ago
      Was I the only one who thought of Transformers 3 right in the beginning?
    • willy  •  10 mths ago
      how bout telling the public about those bases up there. and whats really going on!
    • Hot chicken sandwich  •  10 mths ago
      I'm aware that some jovian moons currently demonstrate volcanic activity as a consequence of the intense gravitational pull of the more massive neighbour,such activity being dependent on the relevent rotation of the moon on its axis (if I'm not mistaken) which our moon currently does not demonstrate . Although in the past this may have been a reality which could have helped assure a molten interiour such as is teh case for earth whose volcanism is to associate with the tidal forces from the moon acting on the fringe of continental plates creating dislocations which help precipitate the flow of lave . Mind you, proof such such volcanism demonstrates that at some in time the moon had a molten interiour...Here on earth , tidal action in bulging the lithosphere should theoretically be associated with some consequential wobbling of the orbit which in reality is deemed as extremely stable...
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 mths ago
      Headline:
      "Rare discovery on dark side of the moon
      On the side not visible to the eye, experts discover a feature that changes the face of the planet" Enough Yahoo! Please get a writer that knows the difference between a moon and a planet.
    • ancient alien  •  10 mths ago
      How come we have not gone back to the moon since 1972? ... think hard for a second and open your mind. Why haven't any other countries gone to the moon (eg Russia)? Simple answer, they found something on the dark side of the moon they weren't suppose to see...
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