November 8, 2008

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Younger Farside

LPOD-Nov8-08.jpg
Kaguya illustrations (Antoniadi to left and Moscovience to right) from Science Magazine

Kaguya scientists have just published a second discovery from analysis of high resolution images from the spacecraft's Terrain Camera. Measuring impact craters on farside maria they determined that volcanism spanned not just from 3.6 to 3.0 billion years, as previous researchers found. It looks like some of the lavas on the floors of the Moscoviense, Apollo and Nishini crater, are as young as 2.5 b.y. This is not especially surprising, for as their histogram shows, nearside volcanism continued sporadically until 1.2 b.y. ago. Antoniadi is too far south (70° latitude) for the high Sun angles on Clementine images to tell if the "lavas" on it's floor are really mare basalts are if they possibly are impact melts. Because they are contained within a center ring I tend to consider them to be mare material.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details
The outlined areas in the images show where craters as small as 200 m across were counted to derive model ages.

Yesterday's LPOD: Blue Moon

Tomorrow's LPOD: A Fence



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