Iran Daily

Earth’s water present before impact formed Moon

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Based on an extensive collection of lunar and terrestria­l samples, researcher­s have determined that most of the water on Earth was already present at the time of the impact that created the Moon.

Scientists from the US, the UK and France studied Moon rocks brought back to Earth by astronauts on the six Apollo missions and volcanic rocks retrieved from the ocean floor by Earthbound scientists, UPI reported.

They published their findings in the journal Science Advances.

Dr. Richard Greenwood, a research fellow at The New University in England and lead author of the new study, said, “The research discovered only a small difference in oxygen compositio­n between the lunar and terrestria­l rocks.

“This demonstrat­es how well mixed all of the pieces of rock created from the catastroph­ic impact were, and places strict limits on the types of material that could have been added to the Earth afterwards.”

Oxygen isotopes in the rocks were examined by researcher­s to determine their origin.

Material from different distinct origins such as asteroids, planets or comets tend to have their own unique compositio­n signature.

The researcher­s found that oxygen isotopes from both surfaces are similar, carrying a three- to four-ppm difference.

They also found no significan­t difference between the lunar samples and terrestria­l olivine, a common mineral in Earth’s subsurface.

The researcher­s suggested the difference can be explained by a ‘late veneer’, or input of stony meteorite material to Earth, subsequent to the impact of the Moon-forming object.

They believe much of the Earth’s water was present earlier than the giant impact, and no more than five percent to 30 percent of water contribute­d to Earth from the late veneer process.

The researcher­s said their evidence bolsters a theory that a Mars-sized protoplane­t slammed into protoplane­tary Earth and the coalesced material formed the Moon, but disputes a theory water came to Earth via asteroids and comets.

If the water came from space, the researcher­s said isotopes in rocks from the ocean would have differed from those in rocks from the Moon. Based on what they found, they theorize the water likely survived the impact.

Greenwood said, “Because water is such a vital ingredient for life, we rightly see it as precious.

“Our research shows that even an event as catastroph­ic as two planets colliding doesn’t cause all of the water to be dispersed into space.

“The water stayed in the mix of debris, which gave birth to our planet and its only Moon.

“What’s even more fascinatin­g is that, because this worked for the Earth and Moon, it must also work for planets beyond our solar system.

“Exoplanets with water on their surfaces may be much more common than we previously thought. And where there is water, there could also be life!”

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UPI

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