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Moon is shrinking, triggering quakes and wrinkles: study

by

WASHINGTON May 14, 2019 - 12:45 pm GMT+3
This picture shows the full moon during a 'blood moon' eclipse as seen from the town of Kazanlak, some 100 km northwest of Plovdiv, on July 27, 2018. (AFP Photo)
This picture shows the full moon during a 'blood moon' eclipse as seen from the town of Kazanlak, some 100 km northwest of Plovdiv, on July 27, 2018. (AFP Photo)
by May 14, 2019 12:45 pm

The Moon is steadily shrinking, causing wrinkling on its surface and quakes, according to an analysis of imagery captured by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) published Monday.

NASA image shows new surface features of Moon (AFP)A survey of more than 12,000 images revealed that lunar basin Mare Frigoris near the Moon's north pole — one of many vast basins long assumed to be dead sites from a geological point of view — has been cracking and shifting.

Unlike our planet, the Moon doesn't have tectonic plates; instead, its tectonic activity occurs as it slowly loses heat from when it was formed 4.5 billion years ago.

This in turn causes its surface to wrinkle, similar to a grape that shrivels into a raisin.

Since the moon's crust is brittle, these forces cause its surface to break as the interior shrinks, resulting in so-called thrust faults, where one section of crust is pushed up over an adjacent section.

As a result, the Moon has become about 150 feet (50 meters) "skinnier" over the past several hundred million years.

The Apollo astronauts first began measuring seismic activity on the Moon in the 1960s and 1970s, finding the vast majority of quakes occurred deep in the body's interior while a smaller number were on its surface.

The analysis was published in Nature Geoscience and examined the shallow moonquakes recorded by the Apollo missions, establishing links between them and very young surface features.

"It's quite likely that the faults are still active today," said Nicholas Schmerr, an assistant professor of geology at the University of Maryland who co-authored the study.

"You don't often get to see active tectonics anywhere but Earth, so it's very exciting to think these faults may still be producing moonquakes."

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