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The weight of 66 feet of over burden is not the same as gas pressure, the gas pressure between particles at 20 meters is still zero, water would still sublime into a gas at 20 meters. Even though you are the one making wild claims here i have offered evidence at every turn you are mistaken but you have supported your ideas with nothing but more claims.

 

 

There is no evidence of water out gassing on the moon, comet impact water would have to be liquid to "soak" into the regolith, if there was a aquifer on the moon you would expect to see out gassing of water at random points all over the moon, not just at the poles in certain craters.

 

Show some evidence to back up your idea of an aquifer on the Moon, ice in shadowed craters at the pole is not evidence of an aquifer on the moon....

 

Yes it is! Pressure is pressure it doesn't matter if it is gas pressure or regolith pressure. In fact before that ice was ejected out to space from the impact it could have been water below the surface prior to the impact and turned into ice once it was exposed to much cooler space.

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