Moon rock is made of . . .   

SINE

Coronado sounded a little skeptical about what I was saying, so I’ll let Wikipedia do the talking. Here’s what it says:

Wikipedia, excerpts retrieved 9/12/2019:

The Apollo missions collected [about] 842 pounds[1] [and] three [Soviet unmanned] Luna spacecraft returned [about]... 10.6 ounces of samples.[2][3][4]... [About] 420 pounds.[6] were discovered [on earth] by scientific teams searching for meteorites in Antarctica, with most of the remainder discovered by collectors in the desert regions of northern Africa and Oman.

They range in age from about 3.16 billion years old for the basaltic samples derived from the … [lunar plains that we call mares], up to about 4.44 billion years old for rocks derived from the highlands.[12]... The youngest basaltic eruptions are believed to have occurred about 1.2 billion years ago,[13] but scientists do not possess samples of these lavas. …The oldest ages of rocks from the Earth are between 3.8 and 4.28 billion years old.

Almost all lunar rocks are depleted in volatiles and are completely lacking in hydrated minerals common in Earth rocks. In some regards, lunar rocks are closely related to Earth's rocks in their isotopic composition of the element oxygen. The mare basalts have relatively high iron values. … some of the mare basalts have very high levels of titanium...

Primary igneous rocks in the lunar highlands compose three distinct groups: the ferroan anorthosite suite, the magnesian suite, and the alkali suite.

If words like this sound interesting to you, you might be somebody who would enjoy reading more about these things by just clicking on the link at the top of the text. And if you want to see moon rocks, they are at the Space Center in Houston and at White Sands Test Facility in Las Cruces, NewMexico.

Some Moon rocks from the Apollo missions are displayed in museums, and a few allow visitors to touch them. One of these, called the Touch Rock, is displayed in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.[19]

Something else that’s interesting is that no one had ever seen three minerals until they found them on the moon: armalcolite, and pyroxferroite and, this one’s for you, sweet Aura: tranquillityite.

AURA

Hah!

SINE

But, later on, they found them on earth, too.

AURA

They didn’t notice them even with moon meteors on earth?- What it takes to get some people to focus!