Lunar Impact Melt Crystallization Produces Reflectance Spectra Dominated By Clinopyroxene Signatures: Implications for the Origin of Pink Spinel Anorthosite

Magma-wallrock interaction and impact melt crystallization are the two leading hypotheses for the formation of orbitally detected lunar “pink” spinel anorthosite (PSA) [1-3]. Distinguishing among hypotheses is complicated because both require mixing of anorthositic crust and MgO-rich ultramafic comp...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Hauptverfasser: Prissel, Tabb C., III, Daniel P. Moriarty, Frank, Madeleine, Parman, Stephen W., Prissel, Kelsey, Gross, Juliane, Head, James W., Milliken, Ralph E., Hiroi, Takahiro, Pieters, Carle M.
Format: Tagungsbericht
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext bestellen
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Magma-wallrock interaction and impact melt crystallization are the two leading hypotheses for the formation of orbitally detected lunar “pink” spinel anorthosite (PSA) [1-3]. Distinguishing among hypotheses is complicated because both require mixing of anorthositic crust and MgO-rich ultramafic components. Models for PSA formation need to account for either the thermodynamic hurdles of crustal assimilation, or the size of impactor and composition of target material needed to generate spinel during crater and basin formation. Determining whether the energy source is endogenic or exogenic is important for understanding the thermal and chemical evolution of the lunar crust. Here we test the impact melt hypothesis by performing controlled cooling experiments on two hypothetical impact melt compositions. The compositions represent mixing of ultramafic magma and anorthositic crust in molar ratios of approximately 50:50 and 25:75. Synthetic crystallized assemblages were prepared for chemical analysis and bidirectional reflectance spectroscopy in the visible to near-infrared wavelengths. All crystallization experiments contained plagioclase, olivine, and clinopyroxene, but trace amounts of spinel were only observed in the 50:50 mix. The experimental spinel is similar to the compositions inferred from remote observations. However, the high-Ca pyroxene in our experimental assemblages (9 – 18 wt.%) resulted in 1 and 2 µm absorption band center positions consistent with synthetic clinopyroxene. The clinopyroxene absorptions are present regardless of specific mineral modes and the presence of either olivine or spinel. These results suggest that impact melt crystallization will produce clinopyroxene-bearing lithologies, the presence of which masks spectral contributions from coexisting spinel and olivine. Assuming that the trace amounts of spinel observed in our experiments could be concentrated and isolated from the mafic silicates by convection or density settling in the impact melt sheet, the spinel-rich areas would still be proximally associated with the remaining silicate-dominated assemblage exhibiting strong clinopyroxene spectral signatures. We conclude that impact melting of the lunar crust can explain rare cases of PSA in association with clinopyroxene. Previous investigations of magma-wallrock interactions [2] demonstrate that small plagioclase-contaminated regions of an ultramafic intrusion can concentrate spinel whereas larger portions of the same intrusion