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Published November 1972 | public
Journal Article

Comparative petrology of Apollo 16 sample 68415 and Apollo 14 samples 14276 and 14310

Abstract

Petrographic and electron microprobe studies of Apollo 16 igneous rock 68415 and Apollo 14 rocks 14276 and 14310 show that all three samples differ from the mare basalts and are characterized by plagioclase as the first liquidus phase and by the abundance of plagioclase which is in part cumulate in origin. Major and minor element abundances and isotopic data prohibit the derivation of rocks like any of these samples from one another by magmatic fractionation during their crystallization. They could have originated by partial melting of an old, more Al-rich source material without isotopic equilibration with the residuum, by complete melting of three independent sources, or by contamination with old radiogenic material. The existence of such feldspathic basalts indicates that the generation of Al-rich magmas may have been an important and widespread lunar process.

Additional Information

© 1972 Published by Elsevier B.V. Received 25 September 1972. We have greatly benefited from a series of heated discussions with G.J. Wasserburg and D. Papanastassiou, and from detailed comments upon the manuscript by R. Dymek, C. Gray, J.C. Huneke, D. Papanastassiou, and G.J. Wasserburg. E. Haines provided fission-track data on sample 14276. This work was supported by NASA contract NAS-9-8074. The microprobe laboratory has been developed with the support of NSF, JPL, and the Union Pacific Foundation.

Additional details

Created:
August 23, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023