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Geologic Processes on the Moon
[Part of the Lunar Study & Observing Certificate Program
cosponsored by the American
Lunar Society and The Moon Society]
Geologic Processes on the Moon
by Eric
Douglass
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This web version was prepared by Peter Kokh from the
original article online at:
http://otterdad.dynip.com/als/page3.html [this URL is
no longer valid]
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An e-mail version of this article is available from
Eric
Douglass
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A
Ready-to-Print PDF Version
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Forward by Peter
Kokh - This purpose of this article is to help
telescope viewers of the Moon to understand the nature of
what they are looking at, and how the various features
came to be. But it is also an excellent Lunar Geology
Primer for anyone interested in the Moon, whether they
ever look at it through the magnifying eyes of binoculars
and telescopes or not.
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I INTRODUCTION
This paper deals with the processes that formed the
features we see on the Moon. The primary geologic processes
that shaped the Moon are the formation of craters, volcanic
activity, and tectonic activity. Each of these will be dealt
with in their respective sections below.
II CRATERING ON THE MOON
Introduction
Craters cover the surface of the Moon. They are the
result of hyper-velocity impacts by meteorites. The velocity
of meteorites upon impact varies, but is generally between 10 and
40 km/sec. This number is a combination of the 'approach
velocity' and the 'escape velocity.' The approach velocity of
objects refers to the velocity of the object with respect to the
Moon. This varies with the type of object (for example, long
period comets generally have a higher approach velocity than short
period comets) and the direction with which it approaches the Moon
(for example, if it approaching the Moon 'head on,' it will have a
higher approach velocity than if it is 'catching up' with the Moon
in its orbit). The escape velocity is a measure of the extra
velocity an object gains as it accelerates in the gravitational
field of an airless Moon/planet. For the Moon, this number is 2.4
km/sec
The velocity of a bolide (the technical name for a body that
strikes any planetary surface) is important for it is the major
determinant of the amount of energy released upon impact.
Bolides possess 'kinetic energy', and the value of this is
proportional to the mass of the bolide multiplied by the square of
the velocity. Thus, if two meteorites of the same mass
strike the lunar surface, but one has twice the velocity of the
other, than the faster one possessed four times (not two times)
the kinetic energy of the slower one.
Upon striking the Moon, the kinetic energy is transferred to a
massive shock wave which both goes down into the Moon's surface
and rearward into the bolide itself. The shock wave that
goes rearward is so powerful that it excess the strength of the
rock--indeed, most of the bolide vaporizes. The shock wave
that goes forward into the Moon vaporizes part of the surface of
the Moon (several times the mass of the bolide), melts the layers
of rock below this (up to 100 times the mass of the bolide), and
shocks (fractures) the surface deeper yet. This period in
the cratering process is called the 'contact and compression'
phase.
The next period in the cratering process is called the
'excavation' phase. This phase begins with the formation of a
release (rarefaction) wave that develops at the edges of the
impact, and forms a route of escape for some of the
vaporized/melted/shocked rock. This escape of material
produces the crater itself, and the material that escapes forms
the ejecta that goes outward onto the Moon surface. Finally,
the decaying shock wave continues to travel through the bedrock of
the Moon, creating effects further away (such as activating older
faults, creating landslides, etc.
The third period in the cratering process is called the
'modification' phase. Here the liquid materials on the crater's
sidewall (impact melt) and semi-stable rim materials slip down to
the crater's floor. Additionally, in larger craters, this is the
time that the central peaks and sidewall terracing occur.
From this brief description on the mechanics of crater
formation, we will now look at the types of craters and the unique
morphology of each. While craters are variously classified,
based on their size and morphology, I am going to use the most
common classification: simple craters, complex craters, and
basins.
Simple Craters
Simple craters are bowl like depressions in the lunar
surface. They occur from submillimeter size to approximately
15 km in diameter (15-20 km is the transition zone between simple
and complex craters).
Simple craters form when small meteorites strike the Moon at
high velocities. The bolide is vaporized along with the
surface struck (the target). This vaporized rock is injected
into the floor of the crater, and follows the release wave to
escape to the outside where it will be emplaced as ejecta. As the
shock wave begins to dissipate, the next layer of target materials
will not be vaporized, but only melted (called 'impact melt').
This material is also injected into the crater's floor and escapes
to the outside as ejecta. As the shock wave further dissipates, it
is no longer able to melt the target materials, but instead only
fractures the rock. This fractured rock is again pushed in both
directions.
The crater itself is formed by decompression along the sides of
the crater, allowing these vaporized, melted, and shocked
fragments to escape. This material will lay itself down as
the ejecta blanket, which has four distinct parts. Just
outside of the crater rim is the zone of continuous ejecta, which
is formed from the last material ejected from the impact.
The next layer out is the discontinuous ejecta, which interfingers
with the surrounding lunar surface. Further out yet is the
bright ray system, which is formed from the first material
ejected. The fourth part of the ejecta is found in the area
of the discontinuous ejecta and just beyond it--this is the area
of 'secondary cratering', which results from 'chunks' of rock
which are thrown out from the crater. This secondary
cratering typically forms a 'herringbone' pattern on the lunar
surface, with multiple craters in a line having small 'v' shaped
lines emanating from them.
Once the ejecta has exited, the remaining crater is called the
transient crater, for other processes will modify its final
form. For simple craters, this final 'modification' involves
the sliding down of impact materials (impact melt and unstable
rim/wall materials) onto the floor of the crater. For craters in
this size range, these materials generally fill the lower third to
half of the transient crater's depth. This will result in
the crater's final form.
Observation of such a crater will reveal a bowl shaped
depression with a sharp rim, some rim deposits (blocks of material
thrown out at the end of excavation), a discrete ejecta blanket
grading from continuous to discontinuous, and a bright ray
system. Across time, parts of this crater will degrade due
to the erosive rain of micrometeorite impacts. The first to
go will be the ray system, followed by the discontinuous ejecta
and the sharp rim. This process will continue until only a
bowl shaped depression with a gentle slope remains.
Complex Craters
Complex craters begin at 20 km (transition zone from
simple to complex is 15-20 km in diameter). They are
characterized by the morphology of a bowl like depression with a
central uplift of one of more massifs (small, mountain like
structures) and terracing on the sidewalls.
Complex craters form when medium sized meteorites impact on the
lunar surface. The impact occurs as discussed in the simple
crater above, though the energies involved are much greater.
The real differences begin after the formation of the transient
crater. At this point the rim is more massive than in a
simple crater. Because the subsurface rock is extensively
fractured, this rim material cannot be supported. It slides
down these fractures (called 'slumping') creating a series of
'terraces' on the crater's inner walls. Central peak or
peaks also form at this time. Peaks form because the impact
compresses the underlying rock, and this rock rebounds after the
shock energy is dissipated--much like a bedspring that is
compressed and then released (the size of the central peaks is
also modified by slumping of the rim material, which pushes rock
towards the central uplift). At the same time this slumping and
peak formation occur, the impact melt on the sides of the crater
is sliding down along with other unstable side/rim material.
This again covers the bottom of the temporary crater and ponds in
some of the terraces. This produces the 'final' form of the
crater
The parts of the complex craters are, then, the central uplift,
which can be one or several peaks that may attain heights of over
a 1000 meters. This is followed outward by a flattened floor
of impact melt which grades into the terraced sidewalls. The
rim occurs at the top of the crater and grades out into the
continuous ejecta, the discontinuous ejecta, the larger secondary
craters (which now can be seen by Earth based telescopes; for
e.g., see those around Copernicus), and the bright ray system.
Degradation occurs in complex craters as in simple
craters. First the ray system goes, followed by
discontinuous ejecta and the sharp rim. The continuous
ejecta erodes later along with the terracing and central
peak. Across geologic time, the crater will become a simple
bowl like depression.
Basins
Basins begin around 200 km in diameter (note: given the
length of this article, I will not further divide basins into
peak-ring basins, central-peak basins, and multi-ring basins; the
reader is referred to more detailed texts here). They are
characterized by a series of rings (instead of a single
rim). Multi-ring basins are the largest cratering events on
the Moon, spanning up to 2500 km in size. The formation of
multi-ring basins is poorly understood, and competing theories
exist. The problem is that the amount of kinetic energy
released is so large that it is difficult to predict how a solid
surface behaves under its influence. The model we present
assumes that the energy causes the solid lunar surface to behave
as a substance with little inherent strength (i.e., a fluid
surface), and so the rings form like a stone dropped into still
water.
When a massive impact occurs on the Moon, the transferred
energy produces a massive shock wave. This vaporizes most of
the bolide and part of the Moon's surface. As in the simple
crater, this material is both injected into the next layer and
allowed to escape out as ejecta. The next layers of melted
rock and shocked rock do the same. The transient crater
which then forms is in the shape of a shallow bowl. Next a
central uplift occurs from rebound of the underlying rock.
This rebound cannot come into equilibrium in the fluid-like
medium, and so collapses, with the rebound-material forming a wave
that propagates across the transient crater's floor. The
wave freezes in place as its kinetic energy is dissipated by
friction. Multiple rings may form in this fashion.
The morphology of a multiring basin is best illustrated by the
Orientale basin. While it is the most recent of the large
basins, only a fraction of it can be seen from Earth.
Fortunately, it is well photographed by spacecraft. The
center of the basin is flat, and probably covered with impact melt
(it has since been modified by volcanism). Further out, at a
general spacing ratio, one comes to each successive ring.
Beyond the outer rim, we find the usual ejecta blanket, with
continuous/discontinuous/secondary impacts. However, here
the ejecta is much more massive and extensive (the secondary
craters can be 10-20 km across, and the continuous ejecta can be
hundreds of meters thick). Also, note that the ejecta forms
a 'hummocky' terrain (examples of this can be seen around the
Imbrium basin as the Fra Maruo formation, and around the Nectaris
Basin as the Janssen Formation).
Across time even these massive basins are eroded away by the
rain of micrometeorites. Indeed, as the basins are all very
old, this erosion has already erased all evidence of their ray
systems.
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III OTHER EFFECTS OF CRATERING ON THE
MOON
Impacts do more than just produce craters. To these
effects we now turn our attention. First, the cratering event
creates a shock wave that doesn't 'stop' in the impact's general
area, but continues to travel out across the Moon. If this
wave contains sufficient energy, it will cause faulting in the
bedrock (the Straight Wall is an example of this). It can
also activate faults that already exist. Finally, it can
loosen semi-stable materials on crater rims, producing
landslides. An example of this is the landslide in
Copernicus that was caused (it is thought) by the shock wave from
the Tyco impact.
Upon impact, basins spread a thick ejecta blanket over a huge
section of the Moon. These blankets accumulated into a layer
several kilometers thick, called the megaregolith. On top of
it is a layer of fine, dusty material called the regolith.
This was produced by smaller meteorites/micrometeorites
pulverizing the upper layers of the megaregolith. The
regolith can be over 15 meters thick on the lunar highlands, and
up to 8 meters thick on the mare. Because the regolith is so
thick, it acts as a protective shield to the underlying structures
(megaregolith, lava flows). Micrometeorites and small
meteorites are not able to pierce it. Only meteors around 3
meters in diameter can now reach the megaregolith (depending on
their velocity).
In earlier sections, we noted that micrometeorite impacts
eroded the craters and basins. This degradation occurs in an
orderly fashion, so that one can detail the age of a crater by
examining its state of degradation. Thus medium sized
craters that have a sharp rim, rim deposits, terracing, a central
peak, a continuous and discontinuous ejecta and a bright ray
pattern are the youngest. These are in the 'Copernican
Period', which extends from the present to 1.2 billion years of
age. Medium sized craters that have all these parts except
the bright ray pattern are in the next in age. These are
from the 'Eratosthenian Period,' which extends from 1.2 to 3.2
billions years of age. Medium sized craters that have lost
their bright ray pattern and the discontinuous ejecta are much
older. They come from the Imbrium Period, which is from 3.2
to 3.85 billion years of age. Medium sized craters that have lost
their continuous ejecta and their 'sharp' rim are from the next
period, called the 'Nectarian Period.' This period extends from
3.85 to 3.92 billion years of age. Medium sized craters that
appear as simple bowl shaped objects without any rim or ejecta are
the most ancient of all. They come from the 'Pre-Nectarian
Period,' which extends from 3.92 billion years of age to the
beginning of the Moon's solid surface.
Note, here, that crater dating has some limitations.
First, small craters degrade more quickly than larger ones.
Second, ray systems degrade faster on mare surfaces. Third,
apparent degradation can occur when large ejecta sheets or a
volcanic flow obscure a crater's parts. However, even given these
three problems, we can still tell much about the age of craters
from the amount of erosion each one exhibits.
top
IV VOLCANISM
Volcanism is the next major geologic force on the
Moon. Radioactive elements (such as uranium, potassium, and
thorium) reheated areas of the lower crust and upper mantle,
creating a series of partial melts. These melts were less
dense than the surrounding rock, and so began rising toward the
surface. The eruption of lava preferentially occurred in
basins, and that for two main reasons: first, these massive
impacts sent faults deep into the Moon's surface (tens of
kilometers), providing conduits for the rising lava. Second,
the mantle underneath the basins rose closer to the surface
(isostatic compensation), making the path to the surface much
shorter.
As lava erupted into the basins, it sometimes flowed long
distances before finally 'emplacing'. It could do this
because lava on the Moon has a low viscosity (it is very thin and
runny). Indeed, when lava materials were melted on Earth, it
was shown to have the consistency of motor oil. This is
because lunar lava is low in silicates ('mafic' lava). By
contrast, the lava on Earth's shields is higher viscosity--making
it more like toothpaste--as it is higher in silicates ('felsic'
lava). These lunar lavas generally erupted from fissures,
which poured out and ponded in the geographically lower
plains. However when erupted onto an inclined surface, the
lava could flow downhill and even create river-like channels from
thermal erosion. On the Moon, these formations are called
'sinuous rilles'. Some run up to several hundred kilometers
before finally spilling their lava onto flatter surfaces.
This process of mare flooding resulted in large, flat lava
sheets that covered the basins. Because the basins were
concave in shape, lava was thicker in the center of the basin and
thinner towards the edges. Now lava is denser (heavier) than
the surrounding crustal rock, so it 'compresses' the bedrock
underneath (a process generally called 'subsidence'). The
thicker areas in the center do this more than the thinner areas
out at the edges. This changes the shape of the basin from a
'flat' surface to a very gently sloped 'bowl' shaped surface. This
produces three unique formations.
First, it created unique, 'target like' surfaces. As the
first lava flow subsided, the center would 'sink' and the outer
areas remain raised. The next flows preferentially filled
the lower central areas. Since each large eruptive event(s)
had a slightly different composition, the 'colors' of the flow
would also follow that pattern. This produced a 'target
like' appearance to certain of the maria, with the outer bands
representing the older flows, and the inner bands the younger
ones. One of the best examples of this is seen in Mare
Serenitatis.
Second, lava subsidence produced stresses within the lava bed
itself. As the lava in the center sank, it produced a
compressive force where the thicker lava beds (on the sides of
basin rings) met the thinner lava beds (on top of basin
rings). These forces caused the lava to 'buckle' (perhaps
due to blind thrust faulting) producing mare ridges over the basin
rings. While there are several types of mare ridges
(discussed below), these are identified by forming a ring within
the mare, and are often associated with small peaks that represent
the highest points of the flooded basin ring (e.g. Mons Piton).
Third, this process of subsidence put stresses on the lava bed and
in the bedrock underneath. This rock was already deeply
fractured from the basin impacts, and these new downward and
inward stresses caused some of those faults to activate.
They opened up creating a series of 'grabens' (grabens occur
where two parallel faults are 'pulled apart,' with the center
section falling down; this produces a flat bottomed
valley). On the Moon, these are specifically called 'arcuate
rills'. These are only found around the edges of lava filled
basins (the best examples are those around the Mare Humorum).
To this point we have discussed the usual schemes for lava
filling of the basins, along with the formation of sinuous rilles,
arcuate rilles, and mare ridges. Next we need to examine a
few other features produced by the volcanic process.
The first of these are lunar volcanoes, which are called lunar
'domes' (not to be confused with volcanic domes on Earth, that
have steep inclines). Lunar domes are smooth sided with low
levels of incline. This is because lunar lava has such a low
viscosity (as noted earlier). Most lunar domes are 5-20 km
across, and often have a small pit crater at their summit.
Note that a few lunar domes are steep sided (especially in the
Marius Hills region), and thus offer evidence for changes in the
lava's characteristics--such as cooling and lower rates of
eruption.
The next features are called 'dark mantling' areas. These
were formed by the process of 'fire fountaining'. When lava
is in the Moon's mantle, it is under considerable pressure.
As it rises to the surface this pressure falls off, allowing
gasses trapped in the lava to escape (called degassing).
These gasses--thought to be carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide--act
as propellants, shooting the lava high above the lunar
surface. There the lava cools as dark, glassy beads.
Upon falling back to the lunar surface, these beads produce large
patches of 'dark mantling'. The Apollo missions returned
some of these glassy volcanic beads (the first ones identified
were dubbed 'orange glass'). Visually, these patches appear
as large, very dark areas with low crater counts, and occur around
basin edges. Some excellent example can be seen around Mare
Serenitatis.
Finally, there are two unusual lunar features produced by
volcanism. Endogenous craters, such as Hyginus Rille, are
interpreted as volcanic in origin, and probably formed as collapse
features ('collapse pits'). Only a return to the Moon with
further geologic work will fully resolve their origin. The
other unusual feature is the 'dark halo' crater. Two types of
'dark halo' craters occur, and both are associated with volcanic
products. In the type found in Crater Alphonsus, the halos are
associated with rilles, and likely represent places of eruptive
degassing with fire fountaining. Thus it is no surprise that their
halos are reminiscent of dark mantling materials. The other
type of dark halo crater occur where a bright ejecta blanket
covers an older lava flow. When a recent impact occurs here, it
pierces the thin veneer of the bright ejecta and unearths the
darker lava flow beneath it. The ejecta from this crater will
include those darker materials (an example of this was Crater
Shorty, which was visited by the Apollo missions).
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V TECTONIC PROCESSES
Tectonism refer to those forces that deform the lunar
surface. These can be endogenous (such as thrust faults) or
external (such as the creation of faults by impact events).
Crater Induced Processes
Impacts create a shock wave that propagates through the
lunar surface. If of sufficient energy, these waves can
induce faulting in the subsurface bedrock, can reactivate faults
located elsewhere, and can induce local changes in semi-stable
materials (e.g.: produce landslides in crater walls).
Examples of faulting in the subsurface layers are seen around a
variety of basins. Such faulting can be radial (straight out
from the basin's center) or concentric (around the basin's
sides). Examples of concentric faulting include 'arcuate
rills' (discussed above). They were only later 'activated' by the
stresses of volcanism. Good examples of these are seen
around Mare Humorum and Mare Serenitatis.
Faulting radial to a basin was also caused by the initial basin
impact. Here the shock wave created faults in the subsurface
rock at some distance from the basin. While initially
covered by ejecta, these were later reactivated by other processes
(such as volcanism). Examples of these include the Straight
Wall, the Cauchy Rilles, and the rilles in Lacus Mortis.
Semistable material can be made unstable by a shock wave,
creating a landslide in a crater. An example of this is the
landslide in Copernicus, that was thought to be triggered by the
Tyco impact.
Volcanism as a Tectonic Process
Other types of tectonic activity are found in association
with volcanism. Lava, by coming from the mantle, is denser
than the overlying crust. As noted earlier, this denser rock
creates local stress fields in the underlying bedrock, producing
mare ridges and arcuate rilles as the lava subsides. Here,
however, we need to discuss the way other types of mare ridges
form.
Mare ridges can also form over crater/basin rims. Such a
situation occurs when a lava bed fills and covers a crater/basin
rim. Now we have a shallow shelf of lava over the rim and a
much deeper shelf where the rim falls off. The dense lava
will subside more over the deep area and less over the shallow
area, inducing local stress fields in the cooling, plastic
lava. At such a point a mare ridge will form. Indeed,
it is by examining mare ridges that we can tell where submerged
basin rings exist! Two other processes that form mare ridges are a
volcanic intrusion just under a shelf of cooling lava and
activation of a fault due to lava loading, with slippage and
subsequent lava deformation. Thus, mare ridges are the end
result of a variety of tectonic processes.
Tidal Interactions
Tidal forces refer to the stresses induced by gravity
between planetary bodies. For example, the Earth's tides are
caused by the tidal stress induced by the Moon. As Earth is
larger, it induces proportionally larger stresses on the
Moon. In fact, the Earth exerts sufficient force to distort
the Moon's shape, so that it is not perfectly round. Before
the Moon was in locked rotation with respect to Earth (the same
side of the Moon always faces the Earth), this distortion likely
produced Moonquakes and subsurface faulting. However, this
distortion also caused tidal slowing--the friction of these events
slowed the Moon's spin. Eventually, the Moon locked into
synchronous rotation. Interestingly, the Moon is also
causing tidal slowing of the Earth, and our spin is ever so
minutely slowing across time.
Now, if the Moon were completely locked into rotation with
Earth, one might expect little seismic activity on the Moon.
However, the seismic monitors left by the Apollo missions revealed
small Moonquakes--Richter Scale 2-3. This is because the
Moon still has some wobble (librations), which causes changing
tidal stresses, resulting in these continuing Moonquakes (note
that there are also thermal causes from secular cooling of the
Moon).
Endogenous Forces
The only new endogenous tectonic force is that induced by
the Moon's continued secular cooling. With this cooling
comes shrinkage of the more plastic mantle. However, the
rigid crust cannot shrink with it. This creates local stress
fields, which are eventually released by thrust faulting (the
crust on one side of the fault slides up diagonally). Similar
faults exist on Mercury where the shrinkage has been even
greater. While these faults are small, there are many of
them, and they are continuing to form (according to experts like
Dr. Alan Binder).
VI CONCLUSION
In the end, we find that the Moon's surface was formed
through a diverse set of processes. While these are not as
complex as the geologic forces on Earth (the Moon lacks plate
tectonics, hydrological and aeolian forces, or a significant
geochemical cycle), it is still a fascinating world. And
precisely because it lacks this extra complexity, it allows us to
study these simpler processes in isolation. While it might
seem that we understand everything about the Moon, let me remind
the reader that there are still many mysteries about the Moon that
are unsolved, and that the simplified scheme presented here is
bound to be exactly that--too simple! May we one day return
to the Moon and learn more about our daughter world.
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TAKE THE TEST - WEB
PAGE - PDF
FILE
APPENDIX I: Books on Lunar Geology &
Atlasses
BOOKS ON OBSERVING THE MOON
ATLASSES
A lunar atlas is necessary to find the objects in this
list. I recommend the Rulk atlas (Atlas of the Moon, by
Antonin Rukl), published by Kalmbach Books. However, any
atlas with moderate detail will work nicely. The nomenclature
will generally follow Rukl, and the ages will follow Wilhelms (The
Geologic History of the Moon).
You may also consult online atlasses (see links in APPENDIX II
below.
Books
Reviewed by ALS
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APPENDIX II: Online Articles and Sources on
Lunar Geology
Articles About the Moon in the Artemis Data Book
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OBSERVING THE MOON
.
PHOTOS & PICTURES
RELATED EXTERNAL WEBSITES
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The Animated
Moon
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Earth
and Moon Viewer (Fourmilab Switzerland) Generates
views of Luna from Earth, or Earth from Luna, at a
specified date and time
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Inconstant
Moon Astronomical observations of the moon for each
day in the lunar cycle, in an artistic presentation.
Takes its name from a short story by Larry Niven.
Warning: music, frames.
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|
The
Face of the Moon (Linda Hall Library) Many historical
images. Drawings of the face of the moon from observors
throughout history, beginning with Galileo in 1554.
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Nine
Planets Luna Page (SEDS) Basic facts about the
Moon
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National
Space Science Data Center Moon Page Facts, missions,
and links to other resources
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The
Lunar Reclamation Society Explore from Home page For
the Armchair Explorer
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Moon
Miners' Manifesto Beyond the Barren Rubble Pile: The
Moon Society's monthly newsletter has many articles
taking the reader beyond the forbidding outward
appearances of the Moon, to sketch out how future
pioneers can make themselves at home on the Moon.
Included are many articles detailing how a lunar economy
could work.
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NASA
photogallery archive
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Space.com's Top
10 list of Moon facts and Moon
phase information.
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Google's images:
Moon search engine gives a range of results from
Apollo to computer simulations of the Moon's creation;
with a few personal images thrown in for those lucky
enough to have Moon for a surname.
|
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