Lunar samples record an impact 4.2 billion years ago that may have formed the Serenitatis Basin

Cernok, Ana; White, Lee F.; Anand, Mahesh; Tait, Kimberly T.; Darling, James R.; Whitehouse, Martin; Miljković, Katarina; Lemelin, Myriam; Reddy, Steven M.; Fougerouse, Denis; Rickard, William D. A.; Saxey, David W. and Ghent, Rebecca (2021). Lunar samples record an impact 4.2 billion years ago that may have formed the Serenitatis Basin. Communications Earth & Environment, 2(1), article no. 120.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-021-00181-z

Abstract

Impact cratering on the Moon and the derived size-frequency distribution functions of lunar impact craters are used to determine the ages of unsampled planetary surfaces across the Solar System. Radiometric dating of lunar samples provides an absolute age baseline, however, crater-chronology functions for the Moon remain poorly constrained for ages beyond 3.9 billion years. Here we present U–Pb geochronology of phosphate minerals within shocked lunar norites of a boulder from the Apollo 17 Station 8. These minerals record an older impact event around 4.2 billion years ago, and a younger disturbance at around 0.5 billion years ago. Based on nanoscale observations using atom probe tomography, lunar cratering records, and impact simulations, we ascribe the older event to the formation of the large Serenitatis Basin and the younger possibly to that of the Dawes crater. This suggests the Serenitatis Basin formed unrelated to or in the early stages of a protracted Late Heavy Bombardment.

Viewing alternatives

Download history

Metrics

Public Attention

Altmetrics from Altmetric

Number of Citations

Citations from Dimensions

Item Actions

Export

About

Recommendations