English edit

Etymology edit

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Noun edit

lunabase (uncountable)

  1. The substance that forms the darker areas of the lunar surface, as opposed to lunarite.
    • 1948, Josiah Edward Spurr, Geology Applied to Selenology: Lunar catastrophic history, page 48:
      The melting conditions in the lunarite were evidently different from those in the lunabase, on account of the difference in chemical composition; and from analogy with terrestrial conditions, the latter melted more easily.
    • 1960, Valdemar Axel Firsoff, Strange world of the moon:
      On this reading of the situation, apart from the water of hydration, there will be very little chemical difference between lunarite and lunabase.
    • 1965, Gilbert Fielder, Lunar geology, page 85:
      Lunarite slopes at greater angles than lunabase, and the difference is due, it is suggested, to the lavas of the lunarite being relatively viscous.
    • 2014, Frederick I. Ordway, Advances in Space Science and Technology, page 42:
      Some crater rings show faintly through the lunabase; others just break surface. Some lunabase areas such as the floor of Petavius are faulted, which may reasonably be attributed to very thin, plastic lunabase cover over a brittle substratum.