
The team used newly refined techniques to determine the age of a sample of FAN from the lunar rock collection at the Nasa Johnson Space Centre. The researchers analysed the isotopes of the elements lead and neodymium to estimate the FAN sample's age at 4.36 billion years. This figure is significantly younger than earlier estimates of the moon's age that range as old as the age of the solar system at 4.568 billion years. The new and younger age obtained for the oldest lunar crust is similar to ages obtained for the oldest terrestrial minerals - zircons from western Australia.
The result strongly suggests that these ages pinpoint the time at which the sample crystallised, they said. The extraordinarily young age of this lunar sample either means that the moon solidified significantly later than previous estimates, or that we need to change our entire understanding of the Moon's geochemical history. It also suggests that the oldest crusts on both Earth and moon formed at about the same time, and that this time dates from shortly after the giant impact, the researchers said. The study is the first in which a single sample of FAN yielded consistent ages from multiple isotope dating techniques.
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