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Over the years, centuries, and millennia, we have been watching the moon and wondering:
Where did it come from? What is it made of? And what events created the distinctive pattern
of light and dark on its surface?
To find out, we have sent satellites out to crash onto its surface, astronauts to comb
its craters and hillsides and collect rocks, and high-tech spacecraft to map its nooks
and crannies.
A half-century of study has brought us closer to the answers. Many scientists now believe
that the moon was born in a monumental collision between Earth and a Mars-sized body early
in the history of the solar system, some 4.5 billion years ago.
From the remains of the impact, a giant ball of magma coalesced in Earth orbit.
Gravity sculpted this hot mass into a sphere. In time, its surface cooled, forming a hard
crust with magma just underneath.
Around 4.3 billion years ago, a giant impact battered the moon's south pole, sending debris
as far as the opposite side of the moon.
The impact formed the Aitken basin. At roughly 2,500 kilometers in diameter and 13 kilometers
deep, it is one of the largest known impact craters in the Solar System.
Its formation marked the beginning of a period of large-scale changes to the moon's surface.
Over several hundred million years, the lunar terrain was rocked by a succession of heavy
impacts. Some formed large basins that would eventually fill in to become the dark colored
patches of the moon known as maria.
These impacts punched enormous holes in the relatively thin lunar crust. Because the moon
had not yet fully cooled on the inside, lava began to seep out through cracks opened up
by the impacts.
Lava spread throughout the craters, gradually filling them in and cooling. Because of the
high iron content of this lava, the mare regions reflect less light and therefore appear darker
than the surrounding highlands.
Around one billion years ago, volcanic activity ended on the near side of the moon as the
last of the large impacts made their mark on the surface. The impacts did not cease,
although they were much smaller than the ones that formed the largest basins.
Some of the largest and best-known impacts from this period formed the Tycho, Copernicus,
and Aristarchus craters. They feature distinctive "rays" that stretch out from the crater sites,
formed by material blasted out at the moment of impact.
Finally, after billions of years of relative quiet, we arrive at the moon we see today.
Though its surface continues to be affected by impacts, the bombardment has slowed dramatically.
The features we now see on the Moon's surface are a permanent record of its early history.
Within them, too, we are finding clues to the evolution of Earth itself.