A YouTuber has asked me to comment on WunderBlunder's claims in his moon rocks video series. I really don't know that much about it. He was asking about oxides, etc. Any comments would be helpful.
Where to start? He does not understand oxidation. The first his major blunders is where he argues that 'proponents of the moon landings claim that the moon rocks are unoxidised.' Jarrah creates a strawman: this means that the rocks didn't react with oxygen but this can easily faked by taking a meteorite and chipping away the oxidised outer layers that were created by earth entry. Jarrah does not understand oxidation in the correct context, it means an atom or ion
loses electrons. So, in the moon rocks there are only trace quantities of Fe
3+ - that's another story. Most of the iron is in it elemental state and exists as nano particles or is in the ferrous state Fe
2+. The high proportion of elemental iron and ferrous iron is rare in Earth rocks as oxygen and water would simply not allow them to exist in the same proportions. In simple terms, moon rocks would rust. Scientists who have studied the moon rocks report Fe
3+, but also report that it is likely to be from terrestrial contamination. Look how easily a nail forms a veneer of rust when exposed to atmosphere. It's the same with his water claims, where he insists that propagandists say that there is no water in the moon rocks, but water has been found on the moon
in situ. He neglects that water found on the moon is in polar regions and the shadows of craters, and scientists aer still debating whether they are observing hydroxyl or adsorbed water (the last time I looked, at least). It has always been reported that water was found in moon samples, but scientists thought it was Earth contamination. Jarrah neglects this too.
Water has also been found in lunar glass beads recently. Jarrah says that this is the smoking gun that NASA have been hiding and the cat has been let of the bag by careless scientists. What Jarrah fails to mention is that SIMS was used to sample the water in the beads which is a much more sensitive technique than used previously (I think it was an infra red technique - need to look it up). A step change in analysis and sampling techniques is revealing new information, that's called progress, right?
In geological terms, rocks that are formed in the presence of water tend to contain large proportions of secondary minerals. There are not large proportions of secondary minerals in moon rocks. If I recall, he found a paper that showed trace amounts of mica in a moon rock, and the created another strawman to attack. He claimed that [we] were telling lies when we said no secondary minerals could be found in moon rocks.
He claims that zap pits from micrometeorite collisions could be created using a gun, and that the He3 present in the moon rocks could have been coated on them using a He3 source.
He claims that because the ratio of oxygen isotopes in earth rocks and moon rocks is similar the moon rocks are Earth rocks mixed in with meteorites. He neglects that the ratio of isotopes for heavier elements is different.
He neglects the absence of lighter elements in the moon rocks. Take the Genesis rock, it's practically at the calcium end of the anorthosites. Why? There's not a great deal of sodium on the moon.
He neglects that glass beads found on the moon show evidence of being created in a low g vacuum, and hold treasures of iron particles that can only be explained by space weathering.
I can go on more and more and more, and there are many here with more expertise than me on this subject.