4.7 Article

A Low Viscosity Lunar Magma Ocean Forms a Stratified Anorthitic Flotation Crust With Mafic Poor and Rich Units

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 44, Issue 22, Pages 11282-11291

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017GL075703

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Jackson School of Geosciences
  2. DOE-NNSA [DE-NA0001974]
  3. NSF
  4. DOE Office of Science [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  5. DOE-BES/DMSE [DE-FG02-99ER45775]
  6. National Science Foundation [EAR-1722495, OCE-1333882]
  7. NSF Geophysics Program and Extreme Physics and Chemistry Program of the Deep Carbon Observatory

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Much of the lunar crust is monomineralic, comprising >98% plagioclase. The prevailing model argues the crust accumulated as plagioclase floated to the surface of a solidifying lunar magma ocean (LMO). Whether >98% pure anorthosites can form in a flotation scenario is debated. An important determinant of the efficiency of plagioclase fractionation is the viscosity of the LMO liquid, which was unconstrained. Here we present results from new experiments conducted on a late LMO-relevant ferrobasaltic melt. The liquid has an exceptionally low viscosity of 0.22(-0.19)(+0.11) to 1.45(-0.82)(+0.46) Pa s at experimental conditions (1,300-1,600 degrees C; 0.1-4.4 GPa) and can be modeled by an Arrhenius relation. Extrapolating to LMO-relevant temperatures, our analysis suggests a low viscosity LMO would form a stratified flotation crust, with the oldest units containing a mafic component and with very pure younger units. Old, impure crust may have been buried by lower crustal diapirs of pure anorthosite in a serial magmatism scenario.

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