| Themes > Science > Astronomy > The Solar System > The Solar System > The Earth's Moon > Surface Properties of the Moon |
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The Near Side The face of the Moon turned toward us is termed
the near side (image at right). It is divided into light areas
called the Lunar Highlands and darker areas called Maria
(literally, "seas"; the singular is Mare). The Maria are lower
in altitude than the Highlands, but there is no water on the Moon so they
are not literally seas (Recent evidence
from the Clementine spacecraft suggests that there may be some water on
the Moon, contrary to previous assumptions). The dark material filling the
Maria is actually dark, solidified lava from earlier periods of Lunar volcanism.
Both the Maria and the Highlands exhibit large craters that are
the result of meteor impacts. There are many more such impact craters in
the Highlands.
The Far SideThe side of the Moon unseen from the Earth is called the far side. One of the discoveries of the first Lunar orbiters is that the far side has a very different appearance than the near side. In particular, there are almost no Maria on the far side, as illustrated in the image shown to the left of a portion of the far side surface. In this figure a number of meteor impact craters are visible.Cratering DensityThe amount of cratering is usually an indication of the age of a geological surface: the more craters, the older the surface, because if the surface is young there hasn't been time for many craters to form. Thus, the Earth has a relatively young surface because it has few craters. This is because the Earth is geologically active, with plate tectonics and erosion having obliterated most craters from an earlier epoch. In contrast the surface of the Moon is much older, with much more cratering. Further, different parts of the surface of the Moon exhibit different amounts of cratering and therefore are of different ages: the maria are younger than the highlands, because they have fewer craters.The oldest surfaces in the Solar System are characterized by maximal
cratering density. This means that one cannot increase the density of
craters because there are so many craters that, on average, any new crater that
is formed by a meteor impact will obliterate a previous crater, leaving the
total number unchanged. Some regions of the moon exhibit near maximal cratering
density, indicating that they are very old. The Lunar Surface MaterialThe bulk density of the Moon is 3.4 g/cc, which is comparable to that of (volcanic) basaltic lavas on the Earth (however, the bulk density of the Earth is 5.5 g/cc, because of the dense iron/nickel core). The Moon is coverered with a gently rolling layer of powdery soil with scattered rocks that is called the regolith; it is made from debris blasted out of the Lunar craters by the meteor impacts that created them. Each well-preserved Lunar crater is surrounded by a sheet of ejected material called the ejecta blanket.Geological CompositionOne striking difference between the Lunar surface material and that of Earth concerns the most common kinds of rocks. On the Earth, the most common rocks are sedimentary, because of atmospheric and water erosion of the surface. On the Moon there is no atmosphere to speak of and little or no water, and the most common kind of rock is igneous ("fire-formed rocks"). Geologically, the Lunar surface material has the following characteristics:
Chemical CompositionThe Lunar rocks may also be examined according to the chemicals that they contain. Such analysis indicates:
Age of Lunar MaterialThe abundances of radioactive elements in rock samples can be used to tell the age of the rock in a process called Radioactive Dating. When such techniques are applied to the Lunar rock samples, one finds the following:
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