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An Apollo 15 Mare Basalt Fragment and Lunar Mare ProvincesLunar sample 15474,4 is a tiny fragment of olivine-augite vitrophyre that is a mare basalt. Although petroraphically distinct from all other Apollo 15 samples, it has been ignored since its first brief description. Our new petrographic and mineral chemical data show that the olivines and pyroxenes are distinct from those in other basalts. The basalt cooled and solidified extremely rapidly; some of the olivine might be cumulate or crystallized prior to extrusion. Bulk-chemical data show that the sample is probably similar to an evolved Apollo 15 olivine-normative basalt in major elements but is distinct in its rare earth element pattern. Its chemical composition and petrography both show that 15474,4 cannot be derived from other Apollo 15 mare basalts by shallow-level crystal fractionation. It represents a distinct extrusion of magma. Nonetheless, the chemical features that 15474,4 has in common with other Apollo 15 mare basalts, including the high FeO/Sc, the general similarity of the rare earth element pattern, and the common (and chondritic) TiO2/Sm ratio, emphasize the concept of a geochemical province at the Apollo 15 site that is distinct from basalts and provinces elsewhere. In making a consistent picture for the derivation of all of the Apollo 15 basalts, both the commonalities and the differences among the basalts must be explained. The Apollo 15 commonalities and differences suggest that the sources must have consisted of major silicate phases with the same composition but with varied amounts of a magma trapped from a contemporary magma ocean. They probably had a high olivine/pyroxene ratio and underwent small and reasonably consistent degrees of partial melting to produce the basalts. These inferences may be inconsistent with models that suggest greatly different depths of melting among basalts, primitive sources for the green glasses, or extensive olivine fractionation during ascent. An integrated approach to lunar mare provinces, of which the Apollo 15 mare basalts constitute only one, offers advances in our understanding of the physical and chemical processes of source formation and mare production but has so far not been utilized.
Document ID
19970022398
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Ryder, Graham
(Lunar and Planetary Inst. Houston, TX United States)
Burling, Trina Cox
(Lunar and Planetary Inst. Houston, TX United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1996
Publication Information
Publication: Meteoritics & Planetary Science
Publisher: Meteoritical Society
Volume: 31
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Exploration
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.26:204897
LPI-Contrib-866
NASA-CR-204897
Report Number: NAS 1.26:204897
Report Number: LPI-Contrib-866
Report Number: NASA-CR-204897
Accession Number
97N22946
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NASw-4574
CONTRACT_GRANT: NASw-4066
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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