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NWA5000 was much larger than any brought back by Apollo. It was ejected from the moon by an asteroid strike ~2000 years ago, and after hurtling through space and around the sun for over 1.3 thousand years, landed in the Western Sahara desert to be discovered in 2007.

Only 0.1% of meteorites are from the moon, making them more rare than pure diamond on Earth. With this unique slice of heaven at work now, I am, needless to say, over the moon!

The matrix looks like a black and white intaglio print of the universe rendered by a spirited yet masterful artist. This stone contains breccias within breccias, and the preferential orientation of clasts (from impact compression) lends a unique 3D appearance to flat surfaces. A generous amount of 4.5-billion year old gleaming metal is present, adding yet another striking element to nature’s artwork.

We know from remote observation and the Luna/Apollo missions that there are two main classes of rocks from the Moon. The first type is referred to as “mare” (meaning “sea”), pertaining to the darker areas of the Moon mainly composed of ancient (3.0 to 3.8 billion year old) basalt lava flows. The second type referred to as “highlands” pertains to the lighter colored areas of the Moon mainly composed of feldspar-rich anorthosite rocks. NWA 5000 is a unique highlands- monomict gabbroic breccia (meaning a type of rock mainly made of related fragments of gabbro). The Moon is believed to be about 4.5 billion years old and for about 600 million years during its early history was bombarded by pieces left over from formation of the planets. Impactors continued to strike the Moon at a decreasing rate, creating the heavily cratered surface of the lunar crust. During this time, melting of the deeper lunar mantle produced fluid basalt magma that erupted into the larger impact basins producing the dark areas of the the lunar surface (“maria”). Knowing this history of the Moon, we can infer that NWA 5000 is very ancient, and much older than most known Earth rocks.

The next period of NWA 5000’s existence was relatively quiet until a massive impact event occurring around 3.2 billion years ago created a giant melt sheet of a type of rock referred to as gabbro. The impacting body left exotic material in this Lunaite, solving the mystery of why there is metal embedded in the gabbro clasts, (something that was never observed before NWA 5000 was studied.) Another asteroid impact around 600 million years ago was mostly responsible for producing its distinctive brecciated matrix as well as bringing this rock to the surface of the Moon. This is where it was exposed to the solar wind, which implanted hydrogen-rich gas bubbles into the matrix. Then another impact event ejected this rock from the Moon and created the cross-cutting, thin glass veins. According to ongoing studies, this happened around two thousand years ago.

Here’s the Meteoritical analysis at the University of Washington.

4″ x 4″ x 3/16″

7 responses to “This is the Moon”

  1. The Sim codes for a lot of Easter Eggs…like this… 😉 Awesome story and sample!

  2. Do Meteoriticists think it possible that Earth ever suffered so massive a meteor impact that ejecta made it to space and might be found on the moon or Mars?

  3. Yes… Earth and Mars exchange tons of ancient material each year (most is small and burns up on entry). But it gets even more interesting… from a recent astrobiology conference at Berkeley:

    Kat Volk (U. of Arizona): “Planetary rearrangements are probably responsible for ejecting large numbers of planets and small bodies into interstellar space, facilitating the transfer of material between planetary systems. The population of icy Kuiper belt objects orbiting beyond Neptune in the outer solar system provides strong evidence that our giant planets did not form in their current locations but instead arrived on their current orbits as a result of planetary migration. During migration, several tens of Earth masses of material were likely gravitationally scattered around the solar system, with most of that mass being ultimately ejected into interstellar space.”

    “Did we lose a planet? Our Solar System looks to have had a 5th giant planet 10-30x the size of Earth that was ejected.”

    “Cassini revealed that Saturn’s rings might be only 150M years old.”

    Breakthrough Discuss 2019 — Migration of Life in the Universe

  4. Very cool! Drop me a line, and I’ll send you an advance copy of a paper…

  5. (gregory.laughlin@yale.edu)

  6. And a cool detail that NWA 5000 slices display, from Washington Univ.

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