Heterogeneous dissemination of projectile materials in the impact melts from Wabar crater, Saudi ArabiaThe initial observations of Spencer (1933) that two distinct impact melts coexist at the 90-m-diameter Wabar crater, Saudi Arabia, is confirmed. A dark or 'black' melt contains on the order of 4 percent meteoritic contamination, while the transparent or 'white' melt contains less than 1 percent. The Fe/Ni ratios in both varieties exhibit considerable scatter on electron-microprobe scales, akin to those reported by others for metal spherules in the black melt. If the meteoritic component is subtracted, both melts are chemically very similar. Clasts engulfed by the Wabar melts were investigated also, as they represent the progenitor lithologies from which the melts formed. Bulk compositions for these clasts reveal subtle differences in modal feldspar content within the quartz-rich Wabar target. Both melts require that a minimum of two target lithologies be present in the Wabar melt zone.
Document ID
19890049178
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Horz, F. (NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Blanchard, D. P. (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
See, T. H. (Lockheed Engineering and Sciences Co. Houston, TX, United States)
Murali, A. V. (Lunar and Planetary Institute Houston, TX, United States)