2020
DOI: 10.1111/maps.13595
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Effects of early intense bombardment on megaregolith evolution and on lunar (and planetary) surface samples

Abstract: Impact rates in the first 500 Myr of the solar system are critical to an understanding of lunar geological history, but they have been controversial. The widely accepted, post‐Apollo paradigm of early lunar impact cratering (about 1975–2014) proposed very low or negligible impact cratering in the period from accretion (>4.4 Ga) to ~4.0 Ga ago, followed by an ~170 million year long spike of cataclysmic cratering, during which most prominent multi‐ring impact basins formed at age ~3.9 Ga. More recent dynamical m… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Although this process has been less constrained (l B , l B0 ), the dominant fragment size is found to be invariably in kilometer scale. The uncertainty of the basin inventory is another key factor that limits our knowledge of the megaregolith (Hartmann, 2019;Hartmann and Morbidelli, 2020). With the completing of the basin list, especially the old structure-erased ones, the estimated upper megaregolith would increase by several kilometers, and the deep crust of more regions would be damaged by the autochthonous fragmentation.…”
Section: Current Knowledge Of Megaregolith Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although this process has been less constrained (l B , l B0 ), the dominant fragment size is found to be invariably in kilometer scale. The uncertainty of the basin inventory is another key factor that limits our knowledge of the megaregolith (Hartmann, 2019;Hartmann and Morbidelli, 2020). With the completing of the basin list, especially the old structure-erased ones, the estimated upper megaregolith would increase by several kilometers, and the deep crust of more regions would be damaged by the autochthonous fragmentation.…”
Section: Current Knowledge Of Megaregolith Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Numerous large impacts occurred during the early bombardment period, shattering and fracturing the lunar crust, producing a globally fragmented layer known as megaregolith (Hartmann, 1973(Hartmann, , 2003(Hartmann, , 2019Hartmann and Morbidelli, 2020;Hörz et al, 1991). Understanding how the megaregolith evolved is important for understanding the lunar thermal evolution history since the crust became more fractured with the cumulative impact cratering influencing the thermal conductivity (Warren and Rasmussen, 1987).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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