Orange glass - Evidence for regional deposits of pyroclastic origin on the moonCrystallized spheres of orange glass from Shorty Crater at the Apollo 17 site are shown by spectral reflectance data to be the characteristic ingredient of the dark mantling deposit of the Taurus-Littrow region. This deposit, mapped on spectral vidicon images taken using earth-based telescopes, apparently is thickest 50 km northwest of the Apollo 17 landing area, and has a gradational contact with the surrounding materials. The irregular areal distribution of the dark-mantle deposit and the gradational borders support conclusions based on laboratory studies of the orange soils that these are volcanic pyroclastic materials. Similar deposits are identified by spectral reflectance properties near Rima Bode, Schroeter W, Fauth H, and Higinus W. The same material is likely to occur at Sulpucius Gallus based on visual and photographic observations of orange soil. The apparently restricted occurrence of the orange-glass deposits in a belt along the edges of major mare basins implies structural control of volcanic vents and a possible deep-seated origin.
Document ID
19750055481
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Adams, J. B. (Fairleigh Dickinson University St. Croix, Virgin Islands; MIT, Cambridge, Mass., United States)
Pieters, C.
Mccord, T. B. (MIT Cambridge, Mass., United States)