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Published October 2015 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Magnetism of a very young lunar glass

Abstract

Recent paleomagnetic studies of Apollo samples have established that a core dynamo existed on the Moon from at least 4.2 to 3.56 billion years (Ga). Because there is no lunar dynamo today, a longstanding mystery has been the origin of magnetization in very young lunar samples (<~200 million years old (Ma)). Possible sources of this magnetization include transient fields generated by meteoroid impacts, remanent fields from nearby rocks magnetized during an earlier dynamo epoch, a weak late dynamo, and spontaneous remanence formed in a near-zero field. To further understand the source of the magnetization in young lunar samples, we conducted paleomagnetic, petrographic, and ^(40)Ar/^(39)Ar geochronometry analyses on a young impact melt glass rind from the exterior of ~3.35 Ga mare basalt 12017. Cosmic ray track densities and our ^(40)Ar/^(39)Ar and cosmogenic ^(38)Ar analyses constrain the glass formation age to be <7 Ma and most likely <20 thousand years (kyr), making it likely the youngest extraterrestrial sample yet studied with paleomagnetic methods. Despite its relatively high fidelity magnetic recording properties compared to most lunar rocks, we find that the glass carries no stable primary natural remanent magnetization and that it formed in a field <~7 μT (with a 2 σ upper limit of <11 μT). Given the poor magnetic recording properties of the majority of lunar samples, this provides further evidence that many or perhaps even all previous paleointensity estimates for ≤1.5 Ga rocks are upper limits on the true paleofield and therefore require neither a protracted strong (>10 μT) core dynamo field nor impact-generated fields.

Additional Information

© 2015 American Geophysical Union. Received 19 JUN 2015; Accepted 1 OCT 2015; Accepted article online 5 OCT 2015; Published online 30 OCT 2015. We thank the JSC staff and the Curation and Analysis Planning Team for Extraterrestrial Materials for allocating our samples, N. Chatterjee for help with the microprobe analyses, and B. Carbone for administrative support. J.B., S.M.T., and B.P.W. thank the NASA Lunar Science Institute and the NASA Solar System Exploration Virtual Institute (grant NNA14AB01A). B.P.W. and D.L.S. thank the NASA Lunar Advanced Science and Exploration Research Program (grant NNX08AY96G) and the NASA Solar System Workings Program (grant NNX15AL62G). B.P.W. thanks the Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science for support. D.L.S. acknowledges the Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation for support. J.G. acknowledges the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (grant ANR-14-CE33-0012). We also thank Rob Coe and other anonymous reviewers for their comments. Demagnetization data for the studied samples are included in the supporting information.

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Published - Buz_et_al-2015-Journal_of_Geophysical_Research__Planets.pdf

Supplemental Material - jgre20451-sup-0001-supinfo.docx

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