
This Friday is the full moon. Most of us appreciate the beauty of the full moon which has driven men to poetic ventures and romantic emotions. But what if the moon did not exist? As you gaze at the full moon this week, try to imagine how things might be different with no moon orbiting our planet.
Besides the obvious; no moonlit walks, no "Moon River" and no Apollo
Moon landings (one small step for a man would have been a much bigger one,)
there are some other important differences which would affect our lives
tremendously.
Many calendars were based on the 29 day cycle of the moon, in fact, the ancestral form of the word month, is moonth! Today, the Islamic and a few other calendars are still based on the moon. Christians calculate the date of Easter by the full moon. Easter is the first Sunday after the first full moon after the Spring Equinox. The Chinese date their new year according the moon. Without the moon's cycle we might have ended up with a very different way of keeping track of time.
Imagine -- no solar or lunar eclipses. -and this would have changed our early views of the shape of the Earth. During a lunar eclipse the curved shadow of our planet can be seen moving across the face of the moon, giving away the round shape of the Earth.
Many of our vocabulary words are "moon oriented." The words "honeymoon" "'lunatic" "moon madness" and "moonflower" would not exist. And try to imagine us without the showy social pastime of "mooning!"
Also, Earth would spin much faster without its orbiting moon. That's because the moon's gravity pulls on Earth's oceans. The moon is largely responsible for the tides. The pull of the moon, and ebb and flow of the tides, puts the brakes on Earth's daily rotation. Billions of years ago, Earth spun around on its axis much faster. At one time, the cycle of day and night was less than ten hours long. If we'd never had a moon, we'd still have a shorter day.
And, if Earth rotated faster, other effects would come into play. Wind patterns would likely be stronger and longer lived. Consider the giant planet Jupiter, which rotates in about ten hours. Hurricanes on Jupiter can be enormous and last for centuries. Wind patterns stretch across the entire planet, giving the Jupiter the banded appearance you can see if you look through a telescope.
A constant gale force wind on Earth would have affected earthly life and evolution. Imagine working, talking, just walking around against the howling winds. Imagine trying to navigate a ship at sea. Exploration would have been greatly affected (much to the pleasure of some native peoples no doubt!) It is even possible that some life forms might not even exist under such conditions.
Copyright © 2001 Kathy A. Miles and Charles F. Peters II