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Peter, were you aware of this recent finding:
https://www.space.com/30450-apollo-moon-soil-samples-disintegrating.html
"The differences between the two datasets are stark. For example, the median particle diameter has decreased from 78 microns (0.0031 inches) to 33 microns (0.0013 inches). And in the original sieve data, 44 percent of soil particles were between 90 and 1,000 microns (0.0035 to 0.039 inches) wide; today, just 17 percent of the particles are that large."
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What's so odd about this MAJOR DEGRADATION is the nature of it changing so SUDDENLY. I thought we'd been studying samples throughout the decades? Why wasn't ANY degradation noted earlier?
Yes, scientists have been studying the Apollo samples through the decades. Of course, most of the Apollo samples are rocks, and this particular test is a study of soil samples. Do you understand the difference?
Second, just because scientists study samples doesn't mean that every sample is subjected to every possible scientific test. Scientists are specialists, so the tests they conduct on a sample are going to be related to their specialisation. Then they send the sample back to NASA so other scientists can conduct other tests related to
their specialisation. If no scientists are interested in performing a certain test on any lunar samples, then that test doesn't get performed.
Therefore, we have two data points for average soil particle size - one collected in 1969 and one in 2012. And that means we have no idea of the shape of the curve between those two years. Therefore, your assertion that the "DEGRADATION" happened "SUDDENLY" isn't supported. (And sorry, but putting those words in caps doesn't give any additional strength to your assertion.)
This alone seems like a smoking gun to me. This simply makes no sense that they'd have NO CLUE ABOUT THIS until 2012.
Well
of course you'd consider it a smoking gun.
The average researcher would dig up the scientific paper the linked article was based on, learn some context and conduct further research based on that. But not you - instead of researching, you leap straight to the conspiratorial conclusion in the expectation that because we also don't know the context you're somehow right. I don't think you'll bother to look for the paper, but here's your chance to prove me wrong.
And as a test of that, here's a question based on something said in the Ross Taylor interview: what significant finding did scientists make about the lack of a particular group of metals in the Apollo rock samples?
As I said, if no scientists are interested in performing a certain test, then that test doesn't get performed. It's as simple as that. Presumably in the years between 1969 and 2007 no scientists were interested in testing average soil particle size.
But in the meantime here are some questions:
1. What is it a smoking gun of? In other words, according to you, what does it prove?
2. What is your logic process to back this up? And I don't mean (a) the samples degraded, therefore (b) the samples are fake. I'd like you to explain
how the degradation is a smoking gun of whatever you think it's a smoking gun of.