There is a lot of articles about Moon Dust Some as metaphore some about the reality.
There is a new book called Moondust: In Search of the Men Who Fell to Earth By Andrew Smith, about the remaining Apollo Astronauts and what they are up to.
Here are some reviews- Robin McKie ,Christopher Silvester, Pat Kane
Now to the Reality. In Don't Breathe the Moon Dust the Health effects pf Regolith are discussed. Evdently Mars Regolith is especially nasty.
Martian dust could be even worse. It's not only a mechanical irritant but also perhaps a chemical poison. Mars is red because its surface is largely composed of iron oxide (rust) and oxides of other minerals. Some scientists suspect that the dusty soil on Mars may be such a strong oxidizer that it burns any organic compound such as plastics, rubber or human skin as viciously as undiluted lye or laundry bleach.
"If you get Martian soil on your skin, it will leave burn marks," believes University of Colorado engineering professor Stein Sture,
One thing to think about is that most modern cities are thoroughly paved rarely do people walk on open ground, so why should we assume that we will have unprepared landing pads and drive and walk through lose regolith? Paving landing pads, roads and walk ways will reduce dust exposure tremendously.
Also using lava tubes for radiation protection instead of burying surface structures in regolith will also reduce exposure to dust significantly.
Another idea of what to do with the Moon dust is make it into solar panels.
Here's how local scientists propose to power the first human outpost on another world: Launch a rover to the moon and melt its dusty soil into acres of electricity-generating solar panels. A year later, when astronauts arrive, all they have to do is plug into the grid.
If this machince could caught the nitrogen, noble gases and water coming off the regolith it would be perfect.
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