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First Global Map of Rockfalls on the Moon

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The Moon’s landscape is eroded through mass wasting processes such as rockfalls and other types of landslides, similar to Earth. 

A research team from ETH Zurich and the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research in Göttingen counted over 136,000 rockfalls on the moon caused by asteroid impacts. Even billions of years old landscapes are still changing.

On the moon, rockfalls occur, and the falling rocks leave clear traces. 

Image: NASA/GSFC/ASU
In October 2015, a spectacular rockfall occurred in the Swiss Alps: in the late morning hours, a large, snow-​covered block with a volume of more than 1500 cubic meters suddenly detached from the summit of Mel de la Niva. It fell apart on its way downslope, but a number of boulders continued their journey into the valley. One of the large boulders came to a halt at the foot of the summit next to a mountain hut, after travelling more than 1.4 kilometers and cutting through woods and meadows.

On the Moon, time and again boulders and blocks of rock travel downslope, leaving behind impressive tracks, a phenomenon that has been observed since the first unmanned flights to the Moon in the 1960s. During the Apollo missions, astronauts examined a few such tracks on site and returned displaced rock block samples to Earth. However, until a few years ago, it remained difficult to gain an overview of how widespread such rock movements are and where exactly they occur. 

After an impressive rockfall in the Swiss Alps at Mel de la Niva in 2015, a large boulder comes to a halt not far from a mountain hut.

© Schweizer Bundesamt für Topografie

Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) in Germany and ETH Zurich have analyzed an archive of more than two million images of the lunar surface and present the first global map of rockfalls on the Moon in today’s edition of Nature Communications.

“The vast majority of displaced boulders on the Moon have a diameter of between seven and ten meters,” explains Valentin Bickel of MPS and ETH Zurich, first author of the new study. “Earlier space probes that have studied the Moon were unable to detect such small features on a global scale,” he adds. It was not until 2010, with the launch of NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, that imagery of the entire lunar surface, with the necessary spatial resolution and coverage, has been available.

These maps of the Moon show all discovered hotspots of rockfalls on the Moon as orange/red patches. The equatorial area between 70 degrees northern and southern latitude is shown in the lower left, the polar regions above. (Credits: MPS/NASA)

The result is a map of the lunar surface between 80 degrees northern and southern latitude that shows 136,610 rockfalls with diameters of more than two and a half meters. “For the first time, this map enables us to systematically analyze the occurrence and causes of rockfalls on another celestial body”, says Dr. Urs Mall from MPS.

Previously, scientists had assumed that lunar quakes in particular were responsible for the displacement of boulders. The new global map of rockfalls indicates that impacts from asteroids may play a much more important role. They are apparently – directly or indirectly – responsible for more than 80 percent of all observed rockfalls.

“Most of the rockfalls are found near crater walls,” says Prof. Dr. Simon Loew of ETH Zurich. Some of the boulders are displaced soon after the impact, others much later. The researchers hypothesize that impacts cause a network of cracks that extend in the underlying bedrock. Parts of the surface can thus become unstable even after very long periods of time. 

Example of an approximately 13 meter wide lunar rockfall in Nicholson Crater that has detached from a cliff (on the right) and rolled downslope for almost one kilometer (towards the left). Numerous other smaller rockfalls can be seen in the immediate vicinity.[less]

© NASA/GSFC/ASU

Surprisingly, even in the oldest lunar landscapes, which formed up to 4 billion years ago or even earlier, traces of rockfall events can be found. Since such imprints would typically disappear after a few million years, these surfaces are apparently still subject to erosion through rockfall, even billions of years after they were formed.

“Apparently, impacts influence and modify the geology of a region over very, very long time scales,” says Bickel. The results also suggest that very old surfaces on other airless bodies such as Mercury or the large asteroid Vesta may still be evolving as well.

In recent months, Bickel has searched through an archive of more than two million of these images. Not manually, of course. Instead, he has deployed a search algorithm that is driven by a neural network that gradually learns to recognize the typical tracks of rockfalls in satellite images.

The result is a map of the lunar surface between 80 degrees northern and southern latitude that shows 136,610 rockfalls with diameters of more than two and a half meters. “For the first time, this map enables us to systematically analyze the occurrence and causes of rockfalls on another celestial body”, says Dr. Urs Mall from MPS. Previously, scientists had assumed that lunar quakes in particular were responsible for the displacement of boulders. The new global map of rockfalls indicates that impacts from asteroids may play a much more important role. They are apparently – directly or indirectly – responsible for more than 80 percent of all observed rockfalls.

These maps of the Moon show all discovered hotspots of rockfalls on the Moon as orange/red patches. The equatorial area between 70 degrees northern and southern latitude is shown in the lower left, the polar regions above. Above 80 degrees northern and southern latitude, long shadows increasingly impede the reliable identification of rockfalls. The images were taken by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC).

© MPS/NASA

“Most of the rockfalls are found near crater walls,” says Prof. Dr. Simon Loew of ETH Zurich. Some of the boulders are displaced soon after the impact, others much later. The researchers hypothesize that impacts cause a network of cracks that extend in the underlying bedrock. Parts of the surface can thus become unstable even after very long periods of time.

Surprisingly, even in the oldest lunar landscapes, i.e. in the areas of the pre-imbrian period, which formed up to 4 billion years ago or even earlier, traces of rockfall events can be found. Since such imprints would typically disappear after a few million years, these surfaces are apparently still subject to erosion through rockfall, even billions of years after they were formed.

“Apparently, impacts influence and modify the geology of a region over very, very long time scales,” says Bickel. The results also suggest that very old surfaces on other airless bodies such as Mercury or the large asteroid Vesta may still be evolving as well.

Where rockfalls are not related to craters, a seismic or volcanic origin is likely. For example, the researchers found rockfalls near tectonic fractures and volcanic vents. The new global map can thus help to identify currently unknown seismically active regions. For future robotic or even crewed missions to the Moon, such regions could turn out to be potentially challenging.

Contacts and sources:
Valentin Bickel

ETH Zurich
Dr. Birgit Krummheuer
Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research

Publication: Impacts drive lunar rockfalls over billions of years Valentin Tertius Bickel, Jordan Aaron, Andrea Manconi, Simon Loew & Urs Mall Nature Communications volume 11, Article number: 2862 (2020) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-16653-3 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16653-3

 


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