Returned samples indicate volcanism on the Moon 120 million years ago.
Bi-Wen WangQian W L ZhangYi ChenWenhao ZhaoYu LiuGuo-Qiang TangHong-Xia MaBin SuHejiu HuiJohn W DelanoFu-Yuan WuXian-Hua LiYuyang HeQiu-Li LiPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
There is extensive geologic evidence of ancient volcanic activity on the Moon, but it is unclear how long that volcanism persisted. Magma fountains produce volcanic glasses, which have previously been found in samples of the Moon's surface. We investigated ~3000 glass beads in lunar soil samples collected by the Chang'e-5 mission and identified three as having a volcanic origin on the basis of their textures, chemical compositions, and sulfur isotopes. Uranium-lead dating of the three volcanic glass beads shows that they formed 123 ± 15 million years ago. We measured high abundances of rare earth elements and thorium in these volcanic glass beads, which could indicate that such recent volcanism was related to local enrichment of heat-generating elements in the mantle sources of the magma.
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