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21 - Light from the Moon …

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 September 2009

Igor Tolstikhin
Affiliation:
Kola Scientific Centre, Russian Academy of Sciences
Jan Kramers
Affiliation:
Universität Bern, Switzerland
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Summary

Introduction

As seen in the preceding chapters, the giant impact fundamentally affected the history of the Earth. This event has been postulated to explain the existence of the Moon, and the parameters for modelling it have been tuned to produce a Moon with the right mass and metal/silicate ratio, and the right angular momentum for the Earth–Moon system.

One of the impressive results of the Luna and Apollo missions is a chronology of the magmatic evolution of the Moon: major planetary-scale differentiation occurred ∼4.45 Gyr, followed by mare basaltic magmatism within ∼ 4.0 to 3.0 Gyr ago. Unlike terrestrial materials, the ancient rocks of the Moon have preserved a record of its very early evolution.

Within the framework of this book, it would have been attractive to exploit this record in order to understand the early history of our planet better. However, from the following sections we shall see that, although the existence of the Moon is essential evidence for the standard model of planetary accretion and although there is an underlying partial similarity of chondrite-like volatile-depleted initial matter to that of the Earth (Section 21.2), the Moon's evolution was fundamentally different from what happened on the early Earth. An exception is the record of frequent impacts on the Moon with a late heavy bombardment lasting up to ∼ 3.8 Gyr ago, which therefore must also have occurred on Earth.

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Chapter
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The Evolution of Matter
From the Big Bang to the Present Day
, pp. 267 - 288
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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