A, the moon and earth BOTH attract, so while the earth pulls them in faster, the moon redirects and acts as a shield to a larger proportion than its size would indicated.
B. and the big reason, weathering. we get plenty of impacts, but we have an atmosphere and weathering that wear the craters down.
Earth has a thick atmosphere. This causes two things. First, astral debris that falls to earth experiences a ton of friction on the way down that causes most to burn up and splits many others into smaller pieces. Second, the impact craters of the few meteorites that do hit earth get covered up quickly as atmospheric effects like wind and rain cause erosion and sediment deposition.
There’s actually a *massive* crater on the Yucatan peninsula in Mexico, which is thought to be where the meteorite that killed the dinosaurs landed, but you’d never know it just by looking at it. You can only see it by mapping out the rock layers.
Three reasons:
1) The atmosphere. Only the bigger rocks can punch through it to even create a crater
EDIT:1.5) Oceans. They’re 70% of the earth’s surface. If a meteorite manages to make a crater on the ocean’s floor, it goddamn earned it.
2) Erosion. Surface features on earth get worn away. Mountains get turned to sand, depressions filled sediment. A lot of craters are actually still there (like the famous dinosaur killer Chicxulub crater), but invisible to the naked eye. I guess this is also 2.5) vegetation and water.
3) Plate tectonics. A lot of craters don’t exist anymore, because the crust they were punched into doesn’t exist anymore.
The moon lacks all of those. Any feature on it’s surface will stay there.
The Earth has just as many craters but most have been weathered away over billions of years from Earth’s activity. The Moon isn’t very geologically active and it doesn’t have an atmosphere so there’s no real way for the craters to disappear on the moon. The Earth’s atmosphere also causes meteors to burn up from the friction and causes less impacts to the surface where the moon has no atmosphere.
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