Off the wire
Interview: New Zealand's national museum looking to ramp up China collaboration  • Urgent: Hospital fire reportedly kills dozens in Saudi Arabia  • Indian stocks open flat  • Thai court sentences 2 Myanmar men to death for killing British tourists  • Yearender: China powers Asia-Pacific growth with infrastructure investment, connectivity  • (Sports Focus) Yearender: A bittersweet year for Chinese soccer  • Myanmar opposition leader holds talks with gov't chief negotiator for peace  • Chinese club offers lucrative contract to Spalletti: report  • Former Chinese basketball player Chen dies at 38  • Dirk Nowitzki passes Shaq for 6th on NBA's all-time scoring list  
You are here:   Home

Newly discovered rock by Chinese rover sheds light on lunar volcanism

Xinhua, December 24, 2015 Adjust font size:

A new type of basaltic rock, discovered by Chinese moon rover Yutu (Jade Rabbit) during an unmanned lunar exploration mission, may help shed light on lunar volcanism.

The rock was sampled at a fresh crater called Zi Wei, a landing site of Chang'e-3, which reached the moon with the rover in December 2013.

Measurements of the rock composition indicate that the basalt contains a high enrichment of titanium dioxide and olivine. Researchers from China and the United States said the basalt is distinctive from samples collected by the Apollo and Luna missions, carried out by the United States and the former Soviet Union decades ago.

They reckon the area was covered in a late-stage magma ocean during the moon's development around three billion years ago. While rock samples found by the Apollo and Luna missions mainly date back from the early-stage magma oceans between three and four billion years ago.

The measurements were made by the rover-mounted Active Particle-induced X-ray Spectrometer (APXS) and the Visible and Near-infrared Imaging Spectrometer (VNIS).

A team of scientists from China and the United States, led by Ling Zongcheng from China's Shandong University, published the findings on the journal Nature Communications this week.

"The chemical and mineralogical information of the landing site provides new grounds for some of the youngest volcanism on the moon," said the journal.

Yutu was designed to roam the lunar surface for three months while surveying for natural resources and sending data back to earth. However, mechanical problems made it unable to move in January 2014, though authorities said later it was still able to send data back to earth. Endi