Most of the surface of the Moon is covered by fine dust created by meteor impacts and by heating of the crustal rocks in the near-vacuum. The lack of water on the Moon prevents this dust from being bound into sedimentary rocks. The depth of the dust does not seem to be very great in any location examined, and averages a few centimeters at most.
Regolith
Saturn is a gas giant, and does not have a surface to speak of.
About 0.005% of the moon's surface is covered with water, mainly in the form of ice found in shadowed craters near the poles. This water ice is believed to have been delivered by comets and other celestial bodies over millions of years.
The dark areas on the Moon's surface are called maria. The maria cover only 15 percent of the lunar surface. The Maria are lower in altitude than the Highlands, but there is no water on the Moon so they are not literally seas. Mare Imbrium or the Sea of Showers is the largest mare at 700 miles in diameter.
The moon's surface is solid and rocky, so it is not soft. It is covered in craters, mountains, and dust.
Yes typiclly it does but some scientists obgect
Rock
Most of the moon is covered by a powder that is rather sticky
It is a new moon.
Most of the moon is covered by a powder that is rather sticky
No. That idea went out with the whole cheese thing. The moon is covered in gray dust.
the moon has a very rough and dusty surface. It is covered by mountains of dust.
The moon is not covered with water - it is a dry and airless celestial body with no liquid water on its surface. There may be some water ice in shadowed craters, but it is minimal compared to the total surface area of the moon.
The surface of Io is covered in primarily sulphur, with areas of sulphur dioxide frost.
Saturn is a gas giant, and does not have a surface to speak of.
The surface of the Moon is rocky and covered with craters, mountains, and plains. It has no atmosphere, so there is no weathering or erosion like on Earth. The surface is also covered in a layer of fine, powdery dust called regolith.
About 0.005% of the moon's surface is covered with water, mainly in the form of ice found in shadowed craters near the poles. This water ice is believed to have been delivered by comets and other celestial bodies over millions of years.
The rocks were similar to rocks formed by volcanoes on Earth, suggesting that vast oceans of molten lava once covered the moon's surface.