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Published July 2016 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Petrogenesis of the Northwest Africa 4898 high-Al mare basalt

Abstract

Northwest Africa (NWA) 4898 is the only low-Ti, high-Al basaltic lunar meteorite yet recognized. It predominantly consists of pyroxene (53.8 vol%) and plagioclase (38.6 vol%). Pyroxene has a wide range of compositions (En_(12–62)Fs_(25–62)Wo_(11–36)), which display a continuous trend from Mg-rich cores toward Ca-rich mantles and then to Fe-rich rims. Plagioclase has relatively restricted compositions (An_(87–96)Or_(0–1)Ab_(4–13)), and was transformed to maskelynite. The REE zoning of all silicate minerals was not significantly modified by shock metamorphism and weathering. Relatively large (up to 1 mm) olivine phenocrysts have homogenous inner parts with Fo ~74 and sharply decrease to 64 within the thin out rims (~30 μm in width). Four types of inclusions with a variety of textures and modal mineralogy were identified in olivine phenocrysts. The contrasting morphologies of these inclusions and the chemical zoning of olivine phenocrysts suggest NWA 4898 underwent at least two stages of crystallization. The aluminous chromite in NWA 4898 reveals that its high alumina character was inherited from the parental magma, rather than by fractional crystallization. The mineral chemistry and major element compositions of NWA 4898 are different from those of 12038 and Luna 16 basalts, but resemble those of Apollo 14 high-Al basalts. However, the trace element compositions demonstrate that NWA 4898 and Apollo 14 high-Al basalts could not have been derived from the same mantle source. REE compositions of its parental magma indicate that NWA 4898 probably originated from a unique depleted mantle source that has not been sampled yet. Unlike Apollo 14 high-Al basalts, which assimilated KREEPy materials during their formation, NWA 4898 could have formed by closed-system fractional crystallization.

Additional Information

© 2016 The Meteoritical Society. Issue online: 7 July 2016; Version of record online: 4 May 2016; Manuscript Accepted: 30 March 2016; Manuscript Received: 15 June 2015. We thank Dr. Steve Elardo and Randy L. Korotev for helpful comments on the earlier version of the manuscript. Constructive reviews by Dr. Clive R. Neal, Amy L. Fagan, and Christine Floss helped to improve this manuscript and are greatly appreciated. This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 41273079, 41573059, 41573060) and the Minor Planet Foundation of Purple Mountain Observatory, and FDCT (039/2013/A2).

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Published - Li_et_al-2016-Meteoritics___Planetary_Science.pdf

Supplemental Material - maps12663-sup-0001-SupInfo.docx

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August 20, 2023
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