A topographic map of the Moon (low
elevations in purple, high in red) shows extensive lava flows in
Oceanus Procellarum. New data from the GRAIL spacecraft suggests the
region was formed by ancient volcanic activity, not by a large impactor
as had long been suspected. The image was rendered by Jay Dickson from
Brown University with data from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and
Lunar Orbiting Laster Altimeter.
The new study, based on data from
NASA's GRAIL mission, found a series of linear gravitational anomalies
forming a giant rectangle, nearly 1,600 miles across, running beneath
the Procellarum region. Those anomalies appear to be the remnants of
ancient rifts in the Moon's crust, say the authors of the new study. The
rifts provided a vast "magma plumbing system" that flooded the region
with volcanic lava between 3 and 4 billion years ago. That giant flux of
lava solidified to form the dark basalts we see from Earth.
It's the shape of the underlying
gravity anomalies that cast doubt on impact hypothesis, said Jim Head,
the Louis and Elizabeth Scherck Distinguished Professor of Geological
Sciences at Brown and one of the authors of the new paper.
"Instead of a central circular
gravity anomaly like all other impact basins, at Procellarum we see
these linear features forming this huge rectangle," Head said. "This
shape argues strongly for an internal origin and suggests internal
forces."
The research team, led by Jeffrey
Andrews-Hanna of the Colorado School of Mines, suggests a new hypothesis
for just what those internal forces may have been. The process, the
researchers believe, was driven by the geochemical composition of the
Moon's crust in the Procellarum region.
Early in its history, the Moon is
believed to have been entirely covered in molten magma, which slowly
cooled to form the crust. However, the Procellarum region is known to
have a high concentration of uranium, thorium, and potassium --
radioactive elements that produce heat. The researchers believe those
elements may have caused Procellarum to cool and solidify after the rest
of the crust had already cooled. When Procellarum did finally cool, it
shrank and pulled away from the surrounding crust, forming the giant
rifts seen in the new data. Magma flowed into those rifts and flooded
the region.
"We think this is a really good,
testable alternative to the impact basin theory," said Head. "Everything
we see suggests that internal forces were critical in the formation of
Procellarum."
New mission, old debate
The familiar face of the Moon's near
side is dominated by the lunar maria, the dark patches etched across
the surface. Most of the large circular features -- like Mare
Serenitatis (Sea of Serenity) and Mare Imbrium (Sea of Rains) -- have
been shown to be impact basins that later filled with volcanic lava,
which eventually cooled to form the dark basalts. Samples gathered
during the Apollo missions, and data gathered by subsequent unmanned
missions, helped to confirm that idea.
But the origin of Oceanus
Procellarum remained up in the air, largely because it simply doesn't
look like the known basins. It is shaped a bit like a horseshoe, while
the other basins are round. Procellarum also lacks surrounding mountains
and radial grooves scoured by impact ejecta, both telltale signs of an
impact basin.
Still, the idea that Procellarum was
indeed formed by an impact surfaced in the mid-1970s. Proponents of the
impact theory argued that Procellarum looked different simply because
it was much older than the other basins. Because of its age, the
telltale mountains and grooves had been eroded away, and debris had
partially filled the basin's midsection, giving it the horseshoe shape.
Finally settling the debate required
a mission like GRAIL, Head said. The mission is led by Maria Zuber, who
earned her Ph.D. at Brown and is now vice president of research at MIT.
The twin GRAIL spacecraft, which orbited the Moon in 2012, made
detailed maps of the Moon's gravity. Those maps have revealed important
details about the Moon's subsurface crust.
"It's like putting the crust under
an X-ray," Head said. "We can go into the subsurface and see what's
there. And when you're looking at what could be very old features,
that's what you have to do because signatures at the surface become
degraded over time."
Apollo 15 Commander David R. Scott, a
visiting professor in the Department of Earth, Environmental, and
Planetary Sciences at Brown, explored the Hadley-Apennine region at the
edge of the Imbrium basin in 1971. "Orbiting the Moon following our
surface exploration, it was very clear that Oceanus Procellarum differed
in many ways from the circular maria in terms of its volcanic and
tectonic activity," said Scott, who was not involved in this latest
research. "After so many years of puzzling over this, GRAIL has now
provided the data to show why it is so distinctly different."
Head said the results from this
study show the remarkable extent to which internal processes can alter
the surface of a planetary body. The data generated here will be helpful
in understanding the evolution of other planets and moons, and aid in
the continuing exploration of our own Moon.
http://www.geologyin.com/2014/12/origin-of-moons-ocean-of-storms-revealed.html
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