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Apollo 17 rock helps date moon

By Eugenie Samuel

28 January 2009

A SPECK of the mineral zircon that’s older than any yet found on Earth has been recovered from a rock sample brought back by astronauts. The grain has helped pinpoint the age at which the molten moon solidified.

Lunar zircons were not studied at the time of the Apollo missions because the technology to date them did not exist, says geologist Clive Neal of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. “It’s serendipitous to find this, and really emphasises the [value] of sample returns,” he says.

Zircon previously found in lunar rocks was dated at between 3.90 and 4.35…

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