[meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases andmeteoriterecovery)

Walter branch waltbranch at bellsouth.net
Tue Jun 28 19:34:33 EDT 2011


Hi Mike,

Another factor to consider is the proximity of Mars to the asteroid belt, 
relative to the Earth and earth's moon.  Not being an expert in orbital 
mechanics, I would presume that, other factors being equal, Mars would have 
received more asteroid impacts simply because it "borders the belt."

Apropos, I believe Phobos and Deimos are captured asteroids.

-Walter Branch



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Michael Gilmer" <meteoritemike at gmail.com>
To: "Richard Kowalski" <damoclid at yahoo.com>
Cc: "meteorite list" <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2011 7:08 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases 
andmeteoriterecovery)


> Hi List,
>
> Well, my lunar meteorite moon base idea has been roundly rejected by a
> host of all-stars from the world of meteorites and science.  Everyone
> from Dr. Korotev to Sterling Webb have shot down my pipe dream with
> great logic that I cannot refute.  I concede and close my comic book
> now!  ;)
>
> Ok, so the Lunar surface is not densely littered, or even
> lightly-peppered with meteorites - if they could be called
> "meteorites" at all.
>
> Humor me  one last time, let's continue to indulge the fantasy just a
> bit more before we stop flogging this dead equine...
>
> The rate of lunar impacts can be a bit more frequent than we thought,
> but with no atmospheric braking, the meteoroids are coming in at
> hypervelocity and they annihilate themselves on impact, or leave
> behind only shattered and shocked tiny remnants that are quickly
> absorbed into the character of the lunar surface.
>
> So, what I am curious about is Mars.  Mars obviously has much more of
> an atmosphere than the Moon, but the air is still quite tenuous on
> Mars, and it can't possibly provide a fraction of the braking action
> that Earth's thick blanket does.  So, shouldn't the Martian surface be
> fairly devoid of meteorites as well?  Wouldn't we put Mars somewhere
> between Earth and the Moon when it comes to the number of meteorites
> that survive the trip to the surface?
>
> We all know about the Meridiani Planum meteorite on Mars, so how lucky
> did Opportunity get?  Did Opportunity literally get the lucky
> opportunity of a lifetime?  Or, might there be more meteorites waiting
> to be found, especially if Mars perhaps had a thicker atmosphere in
> the past and/or if geological forces concentrated meteorites in "sweet
> spots" on the Martian surface?  (ala Antarctica)
>
> There is no real "need" to go retrieve meteorites from the surfaces of
> other worlds.  But, when the day comes, far from now (hopefully
> sooner), when man has colonies or permanent bases on other worlds, we
> will occasionally run across meteorites on other worlds as we carry
> out our other routine works.  Surface work and mining will turn up the
> odd specimen from time to time.  On the Moon, the surface has been
> geologically dead (basically) for a long long time.  So, with no
> mechanical weathering and no chemical weathering, anything that
> survived the rifle-shot fall to the surface in the last billion (2?)
> years is still extant and waiting to be found....right?
>
> The $64 question is - How many such "meteorites" (lunarites?) are
> there waiting to be found now?
>
> The expert qualified consensus says - Not very many, if any at all.
>
> Mars had a more complex history atmospherically and geologically than
> the Moon, so I assume the formulas of meteorite frequency would differ
> as such?
>
> Best regards,
>
> MikeG
>
> PS - WANTED : an etched part-slice of Meridiani Planum, roughly
> palm-sized, 2-3mm thick.  Will trade gold-pressed latinum.  Contact me
> off-list with offers.  :)
>
> -- 
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Galactic Stone & Ironworks - Meteorites & Amber (Michael Gilmer)
>
> Website - http://www.galactic-stone.com
> Facebook - http://tinyurl.com/42h79my
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> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
> On 6/28/11, Richard Kowalski <damoclid at yahoo.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>> ________________________________
>> From: MexicoDoug <mexicodoug at aim.com>
>> To: etmeteorites at hotmail.com; Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
>> Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2011 2:35 PM
>> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases and
>> meteoriterecovery)
>>
>>
>>
>> You want to go the the nearer Lagrangian Points in plain space between 
>> the
>> Earth and Moon. That is where the most fascinating stuff is to be found,
>> written in unaltered stone the genesis of the Moon and plenty more debris 
>> to
>> keep scientists and collectors busy and overworked for the nex 10,000 
>> years!
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> There are no known Earth Trojans.
>>
>> --
>> Richard Kowalski
>> Full Moon Photography
>> IMCA #1081
>> ______________________________________________
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