Metorites and astroids.
holes that astroids hit
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The patchy appearance of the moon, known as the "Man in the Moon," is due to variations in the moon's surface brightness caused by differences in the mineral composition of the lunar soil. These variations create the illusion of distinct features like plains and craters when viewed from Earth.
crators
Crators? If that's what you mean by circular depression.
no, the earth does not have crators because the crators will go right through the earth "wall". If the earth did have crators like the moon, than we would be living on some other planet because we would not get sunlight.
crators, maria, elevation. those are some things you can see that are visible on the moon.
the invention helps people see the crators and the maria on the moons surface
It got hit by lots of meteors - the trick is that there is little erosion on the moon so all those craters are still there.
yes
The craters on the moon were formed by impacts from meteoroids and asteroids over billions of years. Since the moon has little to no atmosphere to burn up these objects before they hit the surface, they collide directly with the moon's rocky terrain, creating craters of various sizes.
The Apollo 8 astronauts Frank Borman, James Lovell and William Anders were the first people to see the craters on the moon closely. Other wise it was Galileo galilee who saw it first.