Petrologic constraints on the origin of the Moon: Evidence from Apollo 14
The Fra Mauro breccias at Apollo 14 contain distinctive suites of mare basalts and highland crustal rocks that contrast significantly with equivalent rocks from other Apollo sites. These contrasts imply lateral heterogeneity of the lunar crust and mantle on a regional scale. This heterogeneity may date back to the earliest stages of lunar accretion and differentiation. Current theories requiring a Moon-wide crust of Ferroan Anorthosite are based largely on samples from Apollo 16, where all but a few samples represent the FAN suite. However, at the nearside sites, FAN is either scarce (A-15) or virtually absent (A-12, A-14, A-17). It is suggested that the compositional variations could be accounted for by the acceleration of a large mass of material (e.g., 0.1 to 0.2 moon masses) late in the crystallization history of the magma ocean. Besides adding fresh, primordial material, this would remelt a large pocket of crust and mantle, thereby allowing a second distillation to occur in the resulting magma sea.
- Research Organization:
- Tennessee Univ., Knoxville (USA)
- OSTI ID:
- 5887286
- Report Number(s):
- N-85-13726
- Resource Relation:
- Other Information: In Lunar Planetary Inst., conference on the origin of the moon, 21p (N--85-13709 04-91)
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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