In a message dated 12/20/2003 8:24:13 AM US Mountain Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< Q: When were most space floaters from Mars and the Moon created? 
 A: A couple billions of years ago when most of the planetary bombardments 
 were occurring. >>

    Actually they are much, much younger.  The CRE ages (time floating in 
space) for martian meteorites range from 19.8 million years to less than 1 
million years with a group at 10-12 million years and most less than 2 million 
years.  The lunar meteorites are practically instantaneous in comparison.   
    So the difference is likely the sampling time frame.   If the decay to 
being unrecognizable is 50,000 years on earth, then the lunar meteorites are 
resulting from significant impacts during that timeframe.  The martian sampling 
timeframe is about 400 times longer giving much more time for significant 
impacts even if they have to be larger impacts.  In addition an impact on mars will 
continue to drop meteorites for millions of years until they hit a planet, 
burn up in the sun, or get tossed out of the solar system.   With lunar 
meteorites it is a shotgun blast and wait for the next impact.  
     The longer time frame for Mars and the smaller impacts necessary for the 
moon evidently even things out.  

Eric Olson
ELKK Meteorites
http://www.star-bits.com

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