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Hadley–Apennine

Coordinates:26°07′56″N3°38′02″E / 26.13222°N 3.63386°E /26.13222; 3.63386[note 1]
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Moon landing site of American Apollo 15
Orbital photo of the Hadley-Apennine site; Apollo 15 landing site is marked with a circle.

Hadley–Apennine is a region on thenear side ofEarth's Moon that served as the landing site for theAmericanApollo 15 mission, the fourth crewed landing on the Moon and the first of the "J-missions", in July 1971.[1][2] The site is located on the eastern edge ofMare Imbrium on a lava plain known asPalus Putredinis. Hadley–Apennine is bordered by theMontes Apenninus (often referred to as "Apennine Front"), a mountain range, and Hadley Rille, a meandering channel, on the east and west, respectively.[3][4]

Data obtained from the composition of soil samples collected on Apollo 15 show that most (about 90%) of the samples from the Apennine Front are brown-glassbreccias, and approximately 60–70% obtained from themare surface arebasalt. Although the basalts seem to vary in their texture, their ages appear to be approximately the same. Most of the samples obtained on the Apennine Front areKREEP (potassium,rare-earth elements,phosphorus) materials,anorthosites,recrystallizednorite, or recrystallized breccia.[5]

Geography and geology

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Location

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Orbital photo of Hadley-Apennine with Apollo 15 traverses labeled
AstronautDavid Scott landsApollo 15'sLunar ModuleFalcon at Hadley, with navigational assistance fromJames Irwin, on July 30, 1971. Starts at about 5,000 feet (1,500 m).
TheLunar ModuleFalcon backdropped by the Swann Range of theMontes Apenninus

Hadley–Apennine is located west of theMontes Apenninus and east of Hadley Rille. The Apennine mountains form a 15,000 foot (4,600 m)escarpment that rises higher above the Hadley plain than theHimalayan front above the plains ofIndia andNepal.[6] Hadley Rille (also referred to as Rima Hadley)[7] is located to the west of the Apollo 15 landing site and was the subject of substantial investigation during that mission. The feature, named from nearbyMons Hadley, is a channel that was likely formed byvolcanic processes earlier in thehistory of the Moon.[3]

Apollo 15 landing site

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See also:Apollo 15 andApollo 15 operations on the Lunar surface

The AmericanApollo 15 mission, the first of the J-series missions that featured both increased scientific capability and the use of theLunar Roving Vehicle, landed in an area of the Hadley–Apennine region to the west of the Apennine Front situated between the mountains Mons Hadley andMons Hadley Delta to the northeast and south, respectively. This landing site was selected with the objectives of exploring the Apennine Front, Hadley Rille, and other geologic features in the area.[8]

Apollo 15 was the first mission in which landing sites were not restricted to equatorial areas. The Hadley–Apennine site was chosen with the specific objectives of sampling material from deeper within the Moon than had been obtained from theFra Mauro formation onApollo 14 and investigating Hadley Rille, a sinuous rille possibly formed by volcanic activity.[3] The site had been of interest to mission planners since early in the program. During the early stages of Apollo landing site planning,Apollo 19 (which was originally planned to be the fourth and penultimate J-mission of the initial exploration portion of the Apollo program) was tentatively set to land in the Hadley–Apennine region, albeit at a point south of the eventual Apollo 15 site and west of Hadley Rille—near the Carlos pit at the southwestern terminus of the rille.[9]

TheMarius Hills area inOceanus Procellarum was also considered for Apollo 15, but mission planners determined that a landing on the edge of Mare Imbrium at the Hadley–Apennine site would be more scientifically fruitful than the Marius Hills alternative, and placing aseismometer at Hadley–Apennine, given the locations of seismic packages from previous Apollo expeditions, would create a more optimal configuration for seismic study.[3]

Apennine Front

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See also:Montes Apenninus

The Apennine mountains are hypothesized to befault-block mountains displaced upward and segmented by the impact that formed Mare Imbrium. The frontal escarpment of Mons Hadley Delta is believed to be an exposed segment of the pre-Imbrium impact lunar crust. This made the mountain one of the mission's primary locations to visit, as doing so would allow the astronauts to obtain samples of the lunar crust as it was before the creation of Mare Imbrium.[10]

The area of the Apennine mountains between Mons Hadley and Silver Spur (a mountain just southeast of Mons Hadley Delta), although lacking an official designation on maps and other official mission literature, was informally referred to as the "Swann Range" by Apollo 15 astronautsDavid Scott andJames Irwin, after mission geology team leader Gordon Swann. One of the mountains in the Swann Range was informally referred to by the astronauts as "Big Rock Mountain", after the Apollo Program Director at the time of the mission,Rocco Petrone.[11]The composition of the samples collected by the Apollo 15 astronauts from the Apennine Front, other thanKREEP (potassium,rare-earth elements,phosphorus) materials, includedanorthosite, and recrystallized norite and breccia.[5]

Unknown before the Apollo 15 mission, there are parallel linear patterns on the faces of the mountains in the area. Although they appeared to be occurrences offracturing orlayering appearing through the regolith, determining this is made difficult by the lighting circumstances during the mission. A dark band on Mount Hadley, believed to be a marking left by lava after receding, was observed by the Apollo 15 crew. Additionally, a thickregolith layer on the lower slopes of the mountains and a thin cover of debris on the upper slopes are suggested by the relative absence of large boulders on the lower mountain flanks.[10]

Rima Hadley

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Hadley Rille, taken byApollo 15 astronautJames Irwin.

Rima Hadley, asinuousrille located west of the Apollo 15 landing site, begins in an area of lowdomes at an elongated crater,Béla, and runs on to the North along the Apennine Mountain Range. Some research has suggested that both the rille and Béla arevolcanic vents, andlava flows created the features. Another hypothesis suggests that the rille was originally alava tube, the roof of which collapsed, creating the current appearance of the rille. Several large boulders, some of which are as large as houses, are strewn about the feature's floor.[8][12][13] The elongated crater Béla, which forms the beginning of Rima Hadley, could have been formed by the collapse of a shallowmagma chamber. Visual observation suggests that the same is the case with other lunar rilles with similar features at their beginnings.[14]

Rima Hadley typically ranges in depth between 600 and 900 feet (180 and 270 m), but is approximately 1,200 feet (370 m) deep at the Apollo 15 landing site. The feature has a cumulative length of about 80 kilometres (50 mi) and an average width of about 0.75 miles (1.21 km). The sides of the rille, at the Apollo 15 site, slope downwards at an angle of about 25 degrees. Before samples were returned from the Moon during theApollo program, several scientists believed that the feature and other similar features were formed by flowing water. This hypothesis has since been changed, however, to attribute the process of the feature's creation to volcanism.[8]

Rima Hadley is interpreted as one of the most defined sinuous rilles on the lunar surface. Outcrops of rock were observed by the Apollo 15 crew on both the near and far sides of the rille and were photographed and, in the case of outcrops on the near rim, were sampled. Layering in these outcrops is evident from the photos taken of them by the crew. Some of the strata observed have thicknesses of up to about 60 metres (200 ft) and appear to vary inalbedo (reflectivity) and texture. Large boulders near the bottom of the rille are believed to be blocks that have broken off of the outcrops above.[10]

South Cluster and North Complex

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The South Cluster, a crater cluster located to the south of the Apollo 15 site near Mons Hadley Delta, is believed to have formed as a result of asecondary impact, or the impact ofejecta/debris from a larger impact elsewhere on the Moon, probably the craterAutolycus about 100 mi (160 km) northwest of the cluster's location. This meant that the Apollo 15 astronauts were able to sample material from other parts of the lunar surface without traversing a great distance. The feature also allowed the astronauts to sample material that was originally located deep within the Moon.[8] The south rim ofDune crater within the cluster was visited by the astronauts.

TheNorth Complex is a collection of several landforms, including craters, that were thought to have been formed by volcanic activity.[8] Although the Apollo 15 astronauts were to visit this feature, they were unable to do so due to time constraints and time-consuming issues in obtainingcore samples.[15]

See also

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26°07′56″N3°38′02″E / 26.13222°N 3.63386°E /26.13222; 3.63386[note 1]

Notes

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  1. ^The specified coordinates indicate the landing site of the Apollo 15 lunar module.

References

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  1. ^"Apollo 15 Mission". Lunar and Planetary Institute. Retrieved29 August 2011.
  2. ^"Apollo 15".The Apollo Program. Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Archived fromthe original on 2 April 2011. Retrieved29 August 2011.
  3. ^abcd"Landing Site Overview".Apollo 15 Mission. Lunar and Planetary Institute. Retrieved18 August 2011.
  4. ^"Apollo 15 Mission Overview". Apollo Lunar Surface Journal. Archived fromthe original on 21 July 2019. Retrieved18 August 2011.
  5. ^abCameron; Delano; Bence; Papike (May 1973). "Petrology of the 2–4 mm soil fraction from the Hadley-Apennine region of the moon".Earth and Planetary Science Letters.19 (1):9–21.Bibcode:1973E&PSL..19....9C.doi:10.1016/0012-821X(73)90173-8.
  6. ^"Apollo 15 Landing Site". Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Archived fromthe original on 29 February 2012. Retrieved18 August 2011.
  7. ^"Rima Hadley".International Astronomical Union. Retrieved18 August 2011.
  8. ^abcdeSimmons, Gene."On the Moon with Apollo 15: A Guidebook to Hadley Rille and the Apennine Mountains"(PDF). National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 21 July 2019. Retrieved18 August 2011.
  9. ^Shayler, David (2002).Apollo: The Lost and Forgotten Missions. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 263–64.ISBN 978-1-85233-575-5.
  10. ^abc"Apollo 15 Preliminary Science Report"(PDF). National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 8 August 2020. Retrieved18 August 2011.
  11. ^"Swann Range, Swann Mountain, and Big Rock Mountain". Apollo Lunar Surface Journal. Archived fromthe original on 30 November 2020. Retrieved19 August 2011.
  12. ^Roberts, Harry."A meandering channel on the Moon: Rima Hadley". Sydney Observatory. Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved18 August 2011.
  13. ^Burke, J. D. (November 1986). "Apollo 15 lunar base site: Steep slopes as an energy resource".Workshop on the Geology and Petrology of the Apollo 15 Landing Site:38–43.Bibcode:1986gpal.work...38B.
  14. ^"Unusual Features"(PDF).Apollo Over the Moon: A View from Orbit. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 15 December 2011. Retrieved18 August 2011.
  15. ^"Apollo 15 Mission Summary". Apollo Lunar Surface Journal. Archived fromthe original on 11 October 2016. Retrieved18 August 2011.

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