Impact gardening
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"Lunar gardening" redirects here. For lunar gardening based on moon phases, see Agricultural astrology.
Impact gardening is the process by which impact events stir the outermost crusts of moons and other celestial objects with no atmospheres. In the particular case of the Moon, this is more often known as lunar gardening. Planetary bodies lacking an atmosphere will generally also lack any erosional processes, with the possible exception of volcanism, and as a result impact debris accumulates at the object's surface as a rough "soil," commonly referred to as regolith. Subsequent impacts, especially by micrometeorites stir and mix this soil. It is estimated that the top centimeter of the lunar surface is overturned every 10 million years.[1]
References
- ↑ G. H. A. Cole, M. M. Woolfson (2002). Planetary Science: The Science of Planets Around Stars. CRC Press. p. 96.
Further reading
- Hartmann et al. (2001). "Martian Cratering 7: The role of Impact Gardening". Icarus 149: 37–51. Bibcode:2001Icar..149...37H. doi:10.1006/icar.2000.6532.
- Housen et al. (1979). "Asteroidal Regoliths". Icarus 39 (3): 317–351. Bibcode:1979Icar...39..317H. doi:10.1016/0019-1035(79)90145-3.
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