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Lunar geochemistry as told by lunar meteorites

Journal

CHEMIE DER ERDE-GEOCHEMISTRY
Volume 65, Issue 4, Pages 297-346

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemer.2005.07.001

Keywords

meteorites; moon; basalt; impact-melt breccia; anorthosite; Antarctica; impact; crater; KREEP; lunar rock

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About 36 lunar meteorites have been found in cold and hot deserts since the first one was found in 1979 in Antarctica. All are random samples ejected from unknown locations on the Moon by meteoroid impacts. Lithologically and compositionally there are three extreme types: (1) brecciated anorthosites with high Al2O3 (26-31 %), low FeO (3-6%), and low incompatible elements (e.g., <1 mu g/g Th), (2) basalts and brecciated basalts with high FeO (18-22%), moderately low Al2O3 (8-10%) and incompatible elements (0.4-2.1 mu g/g Th), and (3) an impact-melt breccia of noritic composition (16% Al2O3, 11% FeO) with very high concentrations of incompatible elements (33 mu g/g Th), a lithology that is identified as KREEP on the basis of its similarity to Apollo samples of that designation. Several meteorites are polymict breccias of intermediate composition because they contain both anorthosite and basalt. Despite the large range in compositions, a variety of compositional parameters together distinguish lunar meteorites from terrestrial materials. Compositional and petrographic data for lunar meteorites, when combined with mineralogical and compositional data obtained from orbiting spacecraft in the 1990s, suggest that Apollo samples identified with the magnesian (Mg-rich) suite of nonmare rocks (norite, troctolite, dunite, alkali anorthosite, and KREEP) are all products of a small, geochemically anomalous (noritic, high Th) region of crust known as the Procellarum KREEP Terrane and are not, as generally assumed, indigenous to the vast expanse of typical feldspathic crust known as the Feldspathic Highlands Terrane. Magnesian-suite rocks such as those of the Apollo collection do not occur as clasts in the feldspathic lunar meteorites. The misconception is a consequence of four historical factors: (1) the Moon has long been viewed as simply bimodal in geology, mare or highlands, (2) one of the last, large basin-forming bolides impacted in the Procellarum KREEP Terrane, dispersing Th-rich material, (3) although it was not known at the time, the Apollo missions all landed in or near the anomalous Procellarum KREEP Terrane and collected many Th-rich samples formed therein, and (4) the Apollo samples were interpreted and models for lunar crust formation developed without recognition of the anomaly because global data provided by orbiting missions and lunar meteorites were obtained only years later. (c) 2005 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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