The Moon — Complete Anomaly Timeline and Reference Table
From KB42
The Moon — Complete Anomaly Timeline and Reference Table
[edit | edit source]Scientific Anomalies: Summary Reference Table
[edit | edit source]| Anomaly | Status | Scientific explanation | Fully resolved? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eclipse size coincidence (Moon and Sun match angular diameter) | Confirmed astronomical fact | Coincidence; anthropic selection | No — no physical explanation for the coincidence |
| Moon's disproportionate size (1/4 of Earth diameter; largest moon-to-planet ratio) | Confirmed | Giant Impact Hypothesis | Partially — GIH proposed but has unresolved isotopic problems |
| Near-circular orbit (eccentricity 0.0549) | Confirmed | Giant Impact debris naturally circularised | Partially — specific eccentricity value is a model output but not uniquely predicted |
| Tidal locking (same face always toward Earth) | Confirmed | Gravitational torque over geological time | Yes — tidal locking mechanism is well-understood |
| Near-side/far-side asymmetry (dramatic geological difference) | Confirmed | KREEP concentration; tidal heating; formation model | Partially — KREEP concentration itself is unexplained |
| Hollow Moon seismic ringing (hours-long reverberation) | Confirmed seismic data; interpretation contested | Extreme dryness and fractured geology | Partially — mechanism plausible but not independently verified at this scale |
| Inverted rock age profile (older soil above younger rock) | Confirmed in some samples | Impact gardening; KREEP terrain; magma ocean overturn | Partially — magnitude of some inversions exceeds model predictions |
| Mascons (mass concentrations beneath maria) | Confirmed (GRAIL mission) | Mantle rebound; dense impact melt; volcanic filling | Partially — the backward gravity field magnitude exceeds some models |
| Metallic mass beneath South Pole-Aitken Basin | Confirmed (GRAIL 2019) | Remnant asteroid core; ilmenite cumulate; unknown | No — no consensus explanation; multiple hypotheses |
| Transient Lunar Phenomena (lights and glows) | Historically documented; instrumentally confirmed in some cases | Outgassing; electrostatics; meteoroid impacts | No — clustering at specific sites (especially Aristarchus) unexplained |
| Ancient magnetic anomalies (magnetised rocks; no current field) | Confirmed | Ancient lunar dynamo; impact magnetisation | Partially — field strength exceeds what small-core dynamo should produce |
| Lunar swirls (bright patterns correlated with magnetic anomalies) | Confirmed (orbital imagery) | Solar wind interaction with crustal magnetic fields | Partially — formation mechanism debated |
| Shallow craters (depth-diameter ratio anomaly) | Confirmed | Isostatic rebound | Partially — floor elevation exceeds some model predictions |
| Convex crater floors (following Moon's curvature) | Confirmed in major basins | Isostatic rebound; mantle uplift | Partially — magnitude unexplained in some cases |
| Glass bead water content (volatile-rich interior) | Confirmed (2017 study) | Pre-existing water in lunar mantle; late accretion | Partially — GIH predicts dry formation; water requires explanation |
| Titanium anomaly (extreme titanium in mare basalts) | Confirmed | Ilmenite cumulate crystallisation from magma ocean | Partially — concentration magnitude requires specific and uncertain model conditions |
| Chemical difference between lunar soil and lunar rocks | Confirmed in specific samples | Long-distance impact ejecta; differential weathering | Partially — magnitude in some cases exceeds predictions |
| Apollo 10 far-side audio (space music) | Confirmed (NASA transcripts 2016) | VHF radio heterodyne interference | Possibly — but crew reaction inconsistent with recognisable equipment noise |
| Unexplained crater circular symmetry at oblique angles | Confirmed in some cases | Complex cratering physics; target material effects | Partially |
| Lunar lava tubes of city-scale dimensions | Confirmed (gravity + pit crater data) | Ancient volcanism in low-gravity environment | Yes (geologically); implications ongoing |
Chronological Timeline of Key Events and Discoveries
[edit | edit source]| Date | Event | Category |
|---|---|---|
| June 18, 1178 | Monk Gervase of Canterbury records five witnesses observing the Moon's upper horn appearing to split and glow with fire | TLP / Historical record |
| 1540 | Earliest systematic TLP records in the NASA catalogue begin | TLP |
| 1787 | William Herschel reports observing three luminous points ("volcanoes") on the dark portion of the Moon | TLP |
| 1828 | Arcadian "pre-lunar" traditions referenced in classical scholarship; Aristotle texts cited | Ancient tradition |
| 1865 | Isaac Asimov (later) — original eclipse coincidence observation context established in solar science era | Context |
| 1868 | Helium discovered in the Sun's corona during a total solar eclipse — eclipse coincidence enables solar science | Scientific significance of eclipse |
| 1919 | General Relativity confirmed during total solar eclipse — eclipse coincidence enables physics confirmation | Scientific significance |
| 1958 (November 3) | Nikolai Kozyrev obtains spectroscopic evidence of gas emission from Alphonsus crater during TLP event | TLP / Instrumental |
| 1959 | Soviet Luna 3 photographs the far side for the first time; the dramatic difference from the near side revealed | Far side anomaly |
| 1965 | Isaac Asimov publishes observation about eclipse size coincidence: "there is no astronomical reason why Moon and Sun should fit so well" | Eclipse coincidence |
| 1968 | Mascons discovered during analysis of Lunar Orbiter spacecraft trajectories | Mascons |
| 1968 | Barbara Middlehurst and Patrick Moore publish NASA catalogue of 579 TLP events (1540-1967) | TLP / Catalogue |
| 1969 (July) | Apollo 11 returns first samples; rocks found to be older than most Earth rocks; chemical anomalies noted | Rock anomalies |
| May 1969 | Apollo 10 crew hears "space music" on far side; transcripts recorded but not publicised | Apollo 10 audio |
| November 20, 1969 | Apollo 12 crashes lunar module; Moon reverberates for approximately 55 minutes; "rang like a bell" | Seismic ringing |
| 1970 | Vasin and Shcherbakov publish "Is the Moon the Creation of Alien Intelligence?" in Sputnik | Spaceship Moon theory |
| April 1970 | Apollo 13 crashes S-IVB rocket stage; Moon reverberates for more than three hours | Seismic ringing |
| 1971 | Apollo 14 and 15 seismic impacts; both produce approximately 3-hour reverberations, confirming pattern | Seismic ringing |
| 1975 | Don Wilson publishes Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon; popularises Vasin-Shcherbakov for American audience | Hollow Moon literature |
| 1977 | Apollo seismic network switched off due to NASA budget cuts; 8 years of data preserved | Seismic programme end |
| 1992 | Aristarchus crater photographed showing a striking blue luminescence — the "blue gem" | TLP / Modern |
| 2005 | Christopher Knight and Alan Butler publish Who Built the Moon? — mathematical argument for artificial construction | Artificial Moon literature |
| 2009 | LCROSS mission confirms water ice in permanently shadowed craters near lunar south pole | Water discovery |
| 2012 | GRAIL mission completes detailed gravity mapping of the Moon; mascon data and subsurface anomalies refined | Mascons / Gravity |
| 2016 | Science Channel broadcasts Apollo 10 "space music" audio, generating international media attention | Apollo 10 audio |
| 2017 | Study by Ralph Milliken's team at Brown University confirms water trapped in volcanic glass beads from the lunar interior — contradicting the "dry Moon" model | Glass bead water |
| 2017 | Purdue University study calculates lunar lava tubes could be up to 5 km wide and structurally stable | Lava tubes |
| 2019 (January) | Chang'e 4 achieves first soft landing on the far side of the Moon; far side ground truth begins | Far side |
| 2019 | Dr. Peter James and team publish detection of 2.4 quintillion-tonne metallic mass beneath South Pole-Aitken Basin | Metallic mass anomaly |
| 2022 | Chang'e 5 returns far-side samples; analysis ongoing | Far side geology |
| Present | Multiple anomalies remain unexplained; the Moon's interior structure, origin, and specific geological history continue to be active research areas | Ongoing |
