Good morning America! You all seem thrilled about Biden’s moon rock. It’s symbolism, of the scientific and exploratory achievements that have been made – and will ideally soon be surpassed – certainly hits home.

What you might not know is that rock has an *epic* backstory. 1/x
This rock is known as Lunar Sample 76015,143 - an unromantic name for one of the geologic treasures brought back from the Moon during the Apollo era. This was scooped up by the Apollo 17 astronauts, including Harrison Schmitt, the only professional geologist sent to the moon. 2/x
But that’s not where our story begins. The rock's sage starts 4.5 billion years earlier.

I don’t know if you know this, but you should: the Moon is a hole-punched volcanic crypt, a place sculpted by huge impacts and strange, epic effusions of lava. 3/x
We don’t know how the Moon formed. But the leading theory, partly because it’s the simplest, is that a Mars-sized protoplanet slammed into a magma ocean-covered baby Earth. The impact debris formed an orbiting disk, and it clumped together. Et voilà. 4/x https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/01/science/moon-earth-collision.html
A whole bunch of cool stuff happened after that. But our moon rock comes into the picture around 600 million years later, around the time giant space rocks were pelting the Moon, Marco Inaros-style. They left some epic scars, mostly on the nearside for some unknown reason. 5/x
These bowl-shaped scars are big. One of them was 720 miles across. For comparison, the asteroid that slammed into Earth 66 million years ago, heralding the end of the age of the dinosaurs, was 110 miles across.

Yeah, I know, right? Phwoar. 6/x
Scientists want to know how big and how fast meteors hit things. Sometimes they use maths. Sometimes they fire rocks at things at 16,000 miles per hour. They then use these experiments to scale things up and work out what punched holes into the Moon. 7/x
Recent work, using a 14-foot cannon to simulate impacts in a laboratory setting, suggests that the rock that made a 720-mile chasm in the lunar nearside was no smaller than 150 miles across, nearly 12 times longer than Manhattan. And it had a mass of 28,000 trillion tons. 8/x
This rock was once a proto-planet, another world trying to gather enough material to become a full-blown planet. It was almost there, but by it clearly messed up at the last minute, smashing into the Moon and destroying itself. 9/x
It was probably moving at speeds in excess of 22,000 miles per hour. The impact, which was at an angle, unleashed more energy than the sum total of the explosives dropped during both World Wars, including both nuclear bombs. 10/x
For reasons that remain completely baffling, there was a delay for a few hundred million years before lava, upwelling from deep below or perhaps from the sides, poured into this giant crater. 10/x
It makes sense that cracking open the crust and taking off lots of pressure on the Moon’s underworld would trigger enormous amounts of melting and magma escape. But if so, why the long delay? 11/x
Scientists have no idea why the delay exists. The gap between impact and eruption is like poking a hole in a water balloon as a kid but not seeing any water leak out until you’re a pensioner. 12/x https://www.wired.co.uk/article/china-moon-mission-change-5
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