James P Hogan. Inherit The Stars. Giant Series #1

there very long, either.” Steinfield made an exaggerated

empty-handed gesture. “The rest you know. People like Kronski have

done all the figuring and put them at around fifty thousand years

old-yesterday!” He waited for a few seconds. “There must be a

Lunarian connection somewhere. The number sounds like too much of a

coincidence to me.”

Hunt frowned for a while and studied the detail of the Farside

hemisphere of the model. “And yet, you must have known about all

this for years,” he said, looking up. “Why the devil did you wait

for us to call you?”

Steinfield showed his hands again and held the pose for a second or

two. “Well, you UNSA people are pretty smart cookies. I figured you

already knew about all this.”

“We should have picked it up sooner, I admit,” Hunt agreed. “But

we’ve been rather busy.”

“Guess so,” Steinfield murmured. “Anyhow, there’s even more to it.

I’ve told you all the consistent things. Now I’ll tell you some of

the funny things. . . .” He broke off as if just struck by a new

thought. “I’ll tell you about the funny things in a second. How

about a cup of coffee?”

“Great.”

Steinfield lit a Bunsen burner, filled a large laboratory beaker

from the nearest tap, and positioned it on a tripod over the flame.

Then he squatted down to rummage in the cupboard beneath the bench

and at last emerged triumphantly with two battered enamel mugs.

“First funny thing: The distribution of samples that we dig up on

Farside that have a history of recent radioactive exposure doesn’t

match the distribution or strength of the activity sources. There

ought to be sources clustered in places where there aren’t.”

“How about the meteorite storm including some, highly active

meteorites?” Hunt suggested.

“No, won’t wash,” Steinfield answered, looking along a shelf of

glass jars and eventually selecting one that contained a

reddish-brown powder and was labeled “Ferric Oxide.” “If there were

meteorites like that, bits of them should still be around. But the

distribution of active elements in the garbage is pretty even-about

normal for most rocks.” He began spooning the powder into the mugs.

Hunt inclined his head apprehensively in the direction of the jar.

“Coffee doesn’t seem to last long around here if you leave it lying

around in coffee jars,” Steinfield explained. He nodded toward a

door that led into the room next-door and bore the sign “RESEARCH

STUDENTS.” Hunt nodded understandingly.

“Vaporized?” Hunt tried.

Again Steinfield shook his head.

“In that case they wouldn’t have been in proximity to the rock long

enough to produce the effects observed.” He opened another jar

marked “Disodium Hydrogen Phosphate.” “Sugar?”

“Second funny thing,” Steinfield continued. “Heat balance. We know

how much mass came down, and from the way it fell, we can figure

its kinetic energy. We also know from statistical sampling how much

energy needed to be dissipated to account for the melting and

structural deformations; also, we know how much energy gets

produced by underground radioactivity and where. Problem: The

equations don’t balance; you’d need more energy to make what

happened happen than there was available. So, where did the extra

come from? The computer models of this are very complex and there

could be errors in them, but that’s the way it looks right now.”

Steinfield allowed Hunt to digest this while he picked up the

beaker with a pair of tongs and proceeded to ifil the mugs. Having

safely completed this operation, he began filling his pipe, stifi

silent.

“Any more?” Hunt asked at last, reaching for his own cigarette

case.

Steinfield nodded affirmatively. “Nearside exceptions. Most of the

Nearside craters fit with the classic model: old. However, there

are some scattered around that don’t fit the pattern; cosmic-ray

dating puts them at approximately the same age as those on Farside.

The usual explanation is that some strays from the recent Farside

bombardment overshot around to the Nearside. . .” He shrugged. “But

there are peculiarities in some instances that don’t really support

that.”

“Like?”

“Like some of the glasses and breccia formations show heating

patterns that aren’t consistent with recent impact . . . I’ll show

you what I mean later.”

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