Ages of the lunar nearside light plains and mariaAn extension of a previous work on relative age mapping for the lunar nearside is presented. The ages were determined from Apollo (Hasselblad, metric, and panoramic) and Lunar Orbiter photographs; three major subdivisions were observed: maria and two older light plains units. The plains units center around 3.8 b.y. and 4.0 b.y., respectively. Ages of maria decrease westward. The oldest maria is 3.7 b.y.; it comprises Mare Tranquillitatis and two small areas in southeastern Mare Imbrium. Oceanus Procellarum, southwestern Mare Imbrium, northern Mare Humorum, and northwestern Mare Serenitatis contain the youngest maria; the youngest of these formed about 1.7 b.y. ago. Emplacement of all three subdivisions occurred over a 2.3 b.y. interval. The three-stage model of mare emplacement proposed by Soderblom (1970a) is confirmed. Thus the sequence is (1) high-Ti basalts in the eastern hemisphere, (2) low-Ti basalts filling circular ring-maria, and (3) high-Ti basalts in the western hemisphere.
Document ID
19750055470
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Boyce, J. M.
Dial, A. L.
Soderblom, L. A. (U.S. Geological Survey Flagstaff, Ariz., United States)