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Targeting A Lunar Bulls-Eye

Looking like a target ring bull's-eye, the Mare Orientale is one of the most striking large scale lunar features. Located on the Moon's extreme western edge, this impact basin is unfortunately difficult to see from an earthbound perspective. It is over 3 billion years old, about 600 miles across and was formed by the impact of an asteroid sized object. The collision caused ripples in the lunar crust resulting in the three concentric circular features visible in this 1967 photograph made by NASA's Lunar Orbiter 4. Molten lava from the Moon's interior flooded the impact site through the fractured crust creating a mare. Dark, smooth regions on the moon are called mare (Latin for sea), because early astronomers thought these areas might be oceans. NASA File image.
by Aaron Gronstal
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Jun 03, 2008
Researchers have used Earth-based radar to examine ejecta material from the massive impact that formed the moon's Orientale impact basin. Orientale basin is located at the very edge of the moon's visible face. Previously, this crater was difficult to study because it is only partially visible to telescopes on Earth. Newly developed techniques now have been used to make high-resolution radar observations of this important region.

The Orientale basin was formed early in the moon's history. The crater is surrounded by three concentric circles and has the appearance of a giant 'bulls-eye'. Studying ejecta from the impact that created this massive lunar bulls-eye can teach us about the history of the moon and how it developed over time.

Impact features on the lunar surface can also help scientists understand the impact history of Earth. Ancient impacts on Earth have played a major role in the evolution of our planet. They're thought to have caused a number of mass extinction events. Asteroids and comets may also have delivered important precursor molecules for the development of life.

Impact Evidence
Studying ancient impacts on Earth is difficult. Volcanism, plate tectonics and weather have erased the evidence of old craters on our planet. Unlike the Earth, the surface of the moon isn't altered by wind, erosion or volcanoes. This is why the lunar surface is riddled with craters. Studying these impact features on the moon can help scientists determine what types of impacts may have occurred on Earth and when they most likely happened.

Craters on the moon are associated with ejecta materials -- chunks of rock and dust that are tossed into the air by impacts. The dusty lunar regolith is mostly pulverized ejecta, and it can be several kilometers thick in places. Previously, scientists had difficulty figuring out which ejecta deposits were associated with specific impact basins.

Digging Deep
The new Earth-based radar observations allow scientists to look deeper into the regolith, and to put a number to the rocks associated with Orientale basin. The research team has determined what the different kinds of ejecta material look like and just how far they spread over the lunar surface.

Surprisingly, ejecta from the Orientale basin can be found over much of the moon's south polar highlands. In fact, material ejected by the impact contributes significantly to the composition of the lunar regolith in this region.

The recent study will help define the scientifically interesting places for future human missions to explore, and what scientists should be looking for when they land.

The research team, led by Rebecca Ghent of the University of Toronto, feels that the findings have "implications for future exploration of the south polar region and the South Pole-Aitken basin," both of which are "likely targets for future landed and sample return missions."

The paper was published in the May edition of the journal Geology.

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Jakarta (AFP) June 2, 2008
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