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The Man in the Moon has become the latest victim of contraction in the
housing market.
Astronomers reporting on Thursday in the US journal Science said they had
found previous undetected landforms which indicate that Earth's satellite has
been shrinking... albeit by only a tiny amount.
The intriguing features, called lobate scarps, are faults created when the
Moon's once-molten interior began to cool, causing the lunar surface to contract
and then crinkle, they said.
Relative to the Moon's age, estimated at around 4.5 billion years, the
contraction is recent, occurring less than a billion years ago, and is measured
at about 100 meters (325 feet).
Lobate scarps were first spotted near the lunar equator in the 1970s by
panoramic cameras aboard the Apollo 15, 16 and 17 missions.
Fourteen new faults have been been spotted in high-resolution images taken
by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.
The new discoveries show that the scarps are globally distributed and not
clustered in equatorial regions, and this provides powerful evidence for the
contraction scenario.
The investigation was headed by Thomas Watters of the Center for Earth and
Planetary Studies at the Smithsonian Museum's National Air and Space Museum,
Washington.
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