I knew there were moonquakes, and that they had left seismographs there during the Apollo missions. But I didn't know
some of the details in this neat article:
The first thing to know about moonquakes is this: They last forever.
While most earthquakes are over in under a minute, moonquakes can last
for an afternoon. In the 1970s, at least one 5.5-magnitude moonquake
shook the lunar surface at full force for more than 10 minutes straight,
then tapered off gradually over the course of several hours.
“The moon was ringing like a bell,” Clive Neal, a geological
sciences professor at Notre Dame, told NASA about the Apollo-era lunar
seismic data he and his colleagues examined. A strong moonquake would be
enough to devastate a hypothetical human settlement—breaching a moon
base’s seal and causing a catastrophic loss of oxygen—which is part of
why scientists became interested in studying the phenomenon in the first
place.
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