Tiny glass beads suggest Moon had active volcanoes when dinosaurs roamed Earth

5 September 2024, 19:54

Moon
Moon. Picture: PA

Their chemical makeup indicates that there were active lunar volcanoes until about 120 million years ago.

Volcanoes were still erupting on the Moon when dinosaurs roamed Earth, new research suggests.

The evidence, three tiny glass beads plucked from the surface of the Moon and brought to Earth in 2020 by a Chinese spacecraft.

Their chemical makeup indicates that there were active lunar volcanoes until about 120 million years ago, much more recent than scientists thought.

An earlier analysis of the rock samples from the Chang’e 5 mission had suggested volcanoes petered out two billion years ago. Previous estimates stretched back to four billion years ago.

The research was published on Thursday in the journal Science.

“It was a little bit unexpected,” said Julie Stopar, a senior staff scientist with the Lunar and Planetary Institute who was not involved with the research.

Images from Nasa’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter in 2014 had also suggested more recent volcanic activity.

The glass beads are the first physical evidence, Ms Stopar said, although more research is needed to confirm their origin.

The Chang’e 5 samples were the first Moon rocks brought to Earth since those collected by Nasa’s Apollo astronauts and by Soviet Union spacecraft in the 1970s.

In June, China returned samples from the far side of the Moon.

The research may help us understand how long small planets and moons, including our own, can stay volcanically active, study co-author He Yuyang from the Chinese Academy of Sciences said.

Researchers studied about 3,000 lunar glass beads smaller than a pinhead and found three with signs they came from a volcano.

Glass beads can form on the moon when molten droplets cool after a volcanic eruption or meteorite impact.

Existing timelines suggest the Moon had already cooled off past the point of volcanic activity by the timeframe suggested by the new research, Ms Stopar noted.

“It should inspire lots of other studies to try to understand how this could happen,” she said.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Election 2024 Trump

Bipartisan task force requests Secret Service briefing after second Trump attack

Sheriff vehicles are pictured near Trump International Golf Club (Stephanie Matat/AP)

Trump was subject of apparent assassination attempt at Florida golf club – FBI

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump (Alex Brandon/AP)

Trump safe after Secret Service opened fire at ‘armed suspect’ near golf club

Taylor Swift arrives before the start of a game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Cincinnati Bengals (Ed Zurga/AP)

Taylor Swift back in Kansas to watch boyfriend Travis Kelce and the Chiefs

Flooded houses in Jesenik, Czech Republic (Petr David Josek/AP)

Death toll rises as rain and flooding force evacuations across central Europe

Flames coming from an apartment building

Couple killed in missile attack on Odesa

Europe has been hit by mass flooding

Storm Boris sweeps through Europe - with at least six dead and thousands evacuated from their homes

Flood water on streets

Thousands evacuate amid rising floodwaters in Czech Republic

Smoke and flames rise from a grassy area

Missile fired from Yemen lands in open area of Israel

Silouette of Jared Isaacman performing his spacewalk

Tech billionaire returns to Earth after first private spacewalk

Tropical-Weather-Mexico

Storm makes landfall on Mexican coast after pounding Los Cabos

Venezuela Pro-Government Rally

Venezuela arrests foreigners allegedly involved in a plot to kill President Maduro

Bremerton Marina

Child injured after being attacked and dragged underwater by river otter

Crowds of people trying to help at a wrecked train

At least three people killed as passenger trains collide in Egypt

Rescuers carry a woman in Pechea, Romania, after torrential rainstorms left scores of people stranded

Four die after torrential rain floods parts of Romania

Michaela DePrince smiling

Michaela DePrince who left war zone to become a ballerina dies at 29