The search for lunar mantle rocks exposed on the surface of the Moon

Author:

Moriarty Daniel P.ORCID,Dygert Nick,Valencia Sarah N.,Watkins Ryan N.,Petro Noah E.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe lunar surface is ancient and well-preserved, recording Solar System history and planetary evolution processes. Ancient basin-scale impacts excavated lunar mantle rocks, which are expected to remain present on the surface. Sampling these rocks would provide insight into fundamental planetary processes, including differentiation and magmatic evolution. There is contention among lunar scientists as to what lithologies make up the upper lunar mantle, and where they may have been exposed on the surface. We review dynamical models of lunar differentiation in the context of recent experiments and spacecraft data, assessing candidate lithologies, their distribution, and implications for lunar evolution.

Funder

NASA | Goddard Space Flight Center

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

Reference89 articles.

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