A new estimate for the age of highly-siderophile element retention in the lunar mantle from late accretion
R. Brasser, S. J. Mojzsis, S. C. Werner, O. Abramov

TL;DR
This study refines the timing of lunar mantle HSE retention, suggesting it occurred around 4.45 billion years ago, by combining impact simulations, crater data, and geochemical constraints to better understand late accretion history.
Contribution
It introduces an improved Monte Carlo impact model and dynamical simulations to estimate lunar HSE retention age, reconciling geochemical and crater chronology data.
Findings
Lunar HSE retention age is approximately 4450 Ma.
Mass of leftover planetesimals at 4500 Ma is about 2x10^{-3} Earth masses.
Excessive leftover mass conflicts with geochemical constraints.
Abstract
Subsequent to the Moon's formation, late accretion to the terrestrial planets strongly modified the physical and chemical nature of silicate crusts and mantles. This alteration came in the form of melting through impacts, as well as the belated addition of volatiles and the highly siderophile elements (HSEs). Current debate centres on whether the lunar HSE record is representative of its whole late accretion history or alternatively that these were only retained in the mantle and crust after a particular time, and if so, when. Here we employ improved Monte Carlo impact simulations of late accretion onto the Moon and Mars and present an updated chronology based on new dynamical simulations of leftover planetesimals and the E-belt. We take into account the inefficient retention of colliding material. We compute the crater and basin densities on the Moon and Mars, the largest objects to…
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