Yorkshire Post

Life on the moon? It may have happened

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THE “MAN in the Moon” may not be so far from reality after all.

Scientists believe the Earth’s desolate airless companion could once have supported life on its cratered surface.

In fact there may have been two early windows of lunar habitabili­ty, according to new research. Conditions would have been suitable for simple life shortly after the moon’s birth four billion years ago and again during a peak in lunar volcanic activity half a billion years later.

At both times the moon is thought to have spewed out large amounts of superheate­d gas and water vapour from its interior. The out-gassing could have wrapped the moon in an atmosphere dense enough to have lasted millions of years, with pools of liquid water forming on the surface.

US astrobiolo­gist Professor Kirk Schulze-Makuch, from Washington State University, said: “If liquid water and a significan­t atmosphere were present on the early moon for long periods of time, we think the lunar surface would have been at least transientl­y habitable.”

Prof Schulze-Makuch and British colleague Professor Ian Crawford, from Birkbeck, University of London, analysed results from recent space missions and studies of lunar rock and soil samples. Evidence from both show that the moon is not as dry as previously thought.

In 2009 and 2010 an internatio­nal team discovered hundreds of millions of tonnes of water ice on the moon. Strong evidence was also found of large amounts of water in the lunar mantle, deep below the surface, thought to have been deposited soon after the moon’s formation.

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