Where
Did The Moon Come From?
It is important to first understand what
the Moon is made of, and how it compares and differs from Earth and asteroids.
To more fully understand this, it helps to know how the Moon came into
existence and the general processes that occurred in its history.
Astrogeology is also discussed in the section
on asteroids, but this section does not require that you read the other
astrogeology section, though it may be helpful to read the latter.
Mystery
solved -- where the Moon came from
The mystery of the origin of the Moon has
been solved by modern science. The first clue regarding the origin of the
Moon is the fact that the Moon is getting further and further away from
the Earth with each orbit. It's a very slow rate of escape and it will
be billions of years before Earth will lose the Moon. It's a well understood
and measured phenomenon.
In fact, if you go backwards in time to
see how far the Moon was from the Earth in the early days of the solar
system, starting 4.6 billion years ago, you find that the Moon would be
extremely close to the Earth if not part of the Earth at that time.
The best way we can theorize this happening
is if the Moon were made of material blown off of the Earth by giant asteroid
impact(s), and that all the material floating around in low Earth orbits
created a big cloud or ring around Earth (much like Saturn and Jupiter's
rings). Eventually, the material stuck together by gravitational force,
making the Moon.
This is called the "Collision-Condensation
Theory" of the Moon, and is the generally accepted modern theory.
(Notably, other moons in the solar system
orbit around their planet's equator, just like the planets all orbit in
the plane around the sun's equator. However, Earth's Moon is unique because
it does not orbit around Earth's equator. It orbits in the plane of the
Sun's planets, as you would expect from material blown off of a planet
by asteroid bombardment coming from the plane of the other planets. Of
course, this is fortuitous because it puts the Moon in the plane of present
day asteroids in the solar system, thereby making it easy for the Moon
to give gravity assists to asteroid payloads coming in from interplanetary
space, as discussed in chapter 3.) The Apollo and Luna samples have further
supported this theory.
The structure
of the Moon
The origin of the Moon has several fundamental
effects on lunar geology.
First, the Moon is made of lighterweight
material blown off of the Earth's surface, and is poor in materials from
the Earth's mantle and core. We see this in the aluminum-rich lunar highland
geologies. We also know by measuring the mass and density of the Moon by
Apollo and other scientific instruments. Overall, the Moon is not very
dense. The Moon does not have a large metal core, unlike Earth, as we know
from seismic studies on the Moon, though later studies suggest it does
have a small heavy, metal-rich core (if not pure metal). (In terms of percent,
there's much more metal in asteroids on average than on the Moon.) The
materials available from the Moon for building things in space are generally
the lightweight silicate and metal oxide minerals of the lunar crust.
Second, the Moon is extremely poor in volatiles
of all kinds, with the exception of permanently shadowed lunar polar craters.
The Apollo soil and rock samples and various other scientific studies show
that the Moon is deficient not only in water but also very deficient in
compounds containing carbon, potassium, sodium and chlorine. That would
be expected from a planet that formed late, after the Sun had already gotten
big and started shining, and the clouds of interplanetary dust had already
been gobbled up by planets so that the sun shined through. The infant sun
would have caused the dust rings around Earth to lose much of their volatiles
before they had a chance to accrete again to form the Moon.
Third, this lack of volatiles not only
means deficient lunar supplies, but also means that certain ore forming
processes that occurred on Earth could not have occurred as commonly if
at all on the Moon. Certain volatile gases helped in the formation of ores
on Earth, e.g., by dissolving and depositing certain minerals, and in making
molten magmas more fluid.
Fourth, the Moon is small, the Earth being
81 TIMES as massive as the Moon. Hence, plate tectonic forces were not
as strong on the Moon. Also, smaller bodies cool off quicker (in effect
having less insulation). The Moon was molten when it first formed, but
it cooled off quicker and underwent less metamorphosis than Earth. There's
less chance for a diversity of deep layers to have been exposed on the
surface. The lack of weather means no sedimentary ores as on Earth, and
no exposed ores due to weathering (though cratering can expose surface
strata, too, albeit not nearly as deep as folding mountain geologies).
The Moon has practically no folding mountains
or volcanoes, and the landform geologic activity still active today on
Earth's surface died out on the Moon billions of years ago. Many of the
long, slow geologic processes that created many of the ores on Earth today
did not occur on the Moon's surface.
Lunar mountains were caused by material
splashed up by giant asteroid impacts and the accretion phase.
Distribution
and densities of ores etc.
In general, much less diversity of ores
is expected on the Moon, according to the opinions of many geologists.
On the other hand, it should also be noted
that some of Earth's richest ores are from its oldest geologies, all lopped
together under the name Pre-Cambrian, which means older than 0.5 billion
years.
Earth rocks are typically 10 million to
0.5 billion years old. (The "age" of a rock is the time since it last solidified
from molten liquid.) The very oldest Earth rocks are 3.5 billion years
old, and are rare specimens. In contrast, practically no Moon rocks are
younger than 3.1 billion years old. The Moon rocks brought back to Earth
are ALL quite old, well preserved rocks, with highlands rocks having solidification
dates as old as 4.48 billion years ago.
The slow cooling of early molten planetary
material generally causes separation of different elements and minerals
at different temperatures as the magma cools slowly over time. The magma
cooled much slower (due to nuclear radiation) and in a less disturbed way
on the Moon, compared with Earth volcanism. This could possibly have created
some special ores. While the oldest crustal ores on Earth have mostly been
eroded, dissipated or buried on Earth eons ago, they're well preserved
on the Moon.
There's little physical evidence of an
original Earth crust. Much more recent Pre-Cambrian rock layers have been
exposed due to uplifts and erosion, and at some places at the continent's
edge. However, these Pre-Cambrian rocks aren't as rich as the lunar highlands
in aluminum and calcium, nor are the oldest known Earth rocks, on average.
Of course, it's possible that some unusual
and unpredicted ores could be discovered on the surface of the Moon, though
we can't depend on that.
Extraterrestrial
deposits of ores on Earth
The Republic of South Africa, the richest
country in mineral wealth (non-fuel minerals), is largely a Pre-Cambrian
geology. Witwatersrand ("the Rand") in South Africa is by far the single
richest gold producer in the world. South Africa has half the world's platinum
group metal resources, and most of the world's chromium resources. Deep
gold mines in Brazil and India, and the extraordinary deposits of Kalgoorlie
in Western Australia, are of Pre-Cambrian origin, as is Siberian gold.
The two most important deposits of uranium-bearing minerals are found in
the Pre-Cambrian rocks of the Belgian Congo and northern Canada.
Of course, the Sudbury Astrobleme in Ontario,
the geology that produces more than half of the world's nickel and yields
cobalt and platinum-group metals, is a well preserved Pre-Cambrian asteroid
impact crater of massive size. It's possible that the slowly cooling magma
oceans produced by asteroid impacts on the Moon could have concentrated
exotic asteroid elements. But we won't know until we go there to investigate.
The role
of water in ore formation -- critical or optional?
Earth literature often suggests or implies
that water is vital in ore-forming processes, even in igneous processes
(those resulting from cooling of molten rock), because water dissolved
in a magma increases fluidity (i.e., decreases viscosity) and encourages
elements to move around and become concentrated. However, water is not
necessarily vital for ore production. Besides asteroid crater deposits,
the Moon has plenty of its own sulfur. Besides, atoms and minerals move
around in a dry magma, albeit slowly, and an undisturbed magma that stayed
molten for millions of years could produce some interesting results. Experiments
still haven't been done on various "dry magma systems" to see what processes
occur; such experiments haven't received support largely because they aren't
seen as commercially relevant to Earth ores and magmas. But 3 billion year
old preserved magma lakes exist only on the Moon. On Earth, they're long
gone.
We should guard against being overly biased
by Earth ores. Only a substantial post-Apollo survey will tell us for sure
whether there are any special ores on the Moon. If aliens sent half a dozen
small Apollo-style scouting expeditions to Earth, it would be extremely
unlikely that they would find any of our great ores. A post-Apollo survey
could possibly find fantastic ores that have no equivalent on Earth. Ore
formation processes have been unveiled and understood usually by hindsight
after discovery and analysis, not by prediction. Many ores are still not
well understood, e.g., in Pre-Cambrian South Africa deposits. Indeed, the
Apollo and Luna samples have given us many surprises, and lunar geology
has turned into a very complex field with many mysteries.
However, we can't count on finding any
special ores when it comes to investing to establish the initial space
based infrastructure, building solar power satellites, etc..
Every major study into mining and processing
lunar material assumes that we will use only what Apollo samples offer.
Nonetheless, the Apollo samples
show that there are minerals abundant in the common lunar soil which are
fairly easily processible to produce major quantities of fiberglass, ceramics,
clear glasses, aluminum, calcium, iron, magnesium, titanium and chromium,
as well as other materials -- the basic building blocks of space development.
For the basics of space development, we
don't need anything exotic.
However, bulk supplies of volatile elements,
e.g., hydrogen, carbon, sulfur, will probably need to come from asteroids.
One exception is that hydrogen could come from the permanently shadowed
lunar polar craters based on the discovery of ice by the Clementine and
Lunar Prospector probes, as discussed later.
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