Elemental abundances of major (Ti, Al, Fe, and Ca), minor (Na, Mn, and Cr), and trace elements [14 rare-earth elements (REE), Y, In, Cd, Rb, Cs, Ba, Co, and Sc] in lunar anorthosites separated from Apollo 11 sample 10085 coarse fines have been determined by means of instrumental and radiochemical neutron activation analysis. The REE distribution pattern of lunar anorthosites, relative to ordinary chondrites, has a positive Eu anomaly. On the assumption that (i) the lunar composition is similar to that of ordinary chondritic meteorites low in total Fe ( approximately 13 percent); (ii) lunar anorthosites are derived from highland cratering events and are representative of the highlands; and (iii) the moon differentiated into olivine, hypersthene, and basaltic and anorthositic phases, and plagioclase crysstallization began after approximately 93 percent solidification, then mass balance calculations yield approximately 30-kilometer and approximately 10-kilometer thicknesses for the lunar highlands for the melting and chemical differentiation of the entire moon and of the upper 200 kilometers, respectively. Corresponding thicknesses of the basaltic basement rocks were approximately 5 kilometers and approximately 2 kilometers, respectively. Alternatively, if the anorthosites of this study are representative of the highlands and the onset of plagioclase crystallization occurred after approximately 50 percent solidification of the initially melted moon, calculations with REE and Ba partition coefficients suggest that the REE and Ba abundances in the primeval moon were similar to those observed in basaltic achondrites.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.170.3961.969 | DOI Listing |
Commun Earth Environ
September 2024
Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
Nature
September 2024
Space Applications Centre (SAC), ISRO, Ahmedabad, India.
Classical fractional crystallization scenarios of early lunar evolution suggest crustal formation by the flotation of light anorthite minerals from a liquid magma ocean. However, this model is challenged by the Myr age range of primitive ferroan anorthosites, their concordance with Mg-suite magmatism and by the compositional diversity observed in lunar anorthosites. Here, we propose a new model of slushy magma ocean crystallization in which crystals remain suspended in the lunar interior and crust formation only begins once a critical crystal content is reached.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Earth Space Chem
October 2021
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, 20 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Recent advances in high-precision potassium (K) isotopic analysis have found considerable isotopic variation in rock samples of the Earth's continental and oceanic crusts; however, it is still uncertain whether there is any resolvable inter-mineral and mineral-melt K isotopic fractionation during igneous and metamorphic processes. Here, we report K isotope compositions of mineral separates from three extremely well preserved igneous rocks (intrusive/extrusive and mafic/intermediate/felsic) in order to investigate possible inter-mineral and mineral-melt K isotopic fractionation at magmatic temperatures. For the first time, we found large inter-mineral fractionation of K isotopes in natural samples (up to 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
July 2021
Department of Earth and Space Sciences, Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology (IIST), Thiruvananthapuram 695 547, India. Electronic address:
The spectroscopic techniques such as Laser Raman, Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR), and hyperspectral have been used widely to understand the mineral chemistry and crystal structure and identify the functional phases and organic molecules in geological materials on Earth and other planetary bodies. The present study used these spectroscopic techniques combined with X-ray Diffraction (XRD) and Electron Probe Micro Analysis (EPMA) to understand the spectral-compositional relationships of the Cr-spinel (Chromian spinel) present in chromitite bodies associated with Sittampundi Anorthosite Complex (SAC), southern India. The bands/lenses of Cr-spinel are found as layers (few centimeters to 6 m thick) intercalated with anorthosites and clinopyroxenites of the SAC.
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