Effects of early intense bombardment on megaregolith evolution and on lunar (and planetary) surface samples
William K. Hartmann, Alessandro Morbidelli

TL;DR
This study models early intense lunar bombardment, showing it caused widespread impact effects that influence lunar surface samples and geological history, challenging previous low-impact models and aligning with recent observational data.
Contribution
It adopts a new impact model of early lunar bombardment, revealing significant effects on megaregolith evolution and surface sample properties, contrasting with earlier low-impact hypotheses.
Findings
Early crater saturation and supersaturation effects
Disruption of magma ocean solidification processes
Erosive destruction of ancient impact basins and melts
Abstract
Impact rates in the first 500 Myr of the solar system are critical to an understanding of lunar geological history, but they have been controversial. The widely accepted, post-Apollo paradigm of early lunar impact cratering (ca. 1975-2014) proposed very low or negligible impact cratering in the period from accretion (>4.4 Ga) to about 4.0 Ga ago, followed by a 170-million-year-long spike of cataclysmic cratering, during which most prominent multi-ring impact basins formed at age of about 3.9 Ga. More recent dynamical models suggest very early intense impact rates, declining throughout the period from accretion until an age of about 3.0 Ga. These models remove the basin-forming spike. This shift has important consequences on megaregolith evolution and properties of rock samples that can be collected on the lunar surface today. We adopt the Morbidelli et al. (2018) "accretion tail" model…
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