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Published March 1994 | public
Journal Article

Observations of impact-induced molten metal-silicate partitioning

Abstract

Observations of molten mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB)-molybdenum (Mo) interactions produced by shock experiments provide insight into impact and differentiation processes involving metal-silicate partitioning. Analysis of fragments recovered from experiments (achieving MORB liquid shock pressures from 0.8 to 6 GPa) revealed significant changes in the composition of the MORB and Mo due to reaction of the silicate and metal liquids on a short time scale ( < 13 s). The FeO concentration of the shocked liquid de creases systematically with increasing pressure. In fact, the most highly shocked liquid (6 GPa) contains only 0.1 wt% FeO compared to an initial concentration of 9 wt% in the MORB. We infer from the presence of micrometer-sized Fe-, Si- and Mo-rich metallic spheres in the shocked glass that the Fe and Si oxides in the MORB were reduced in an estimated oxygen fugacity of 10^(−17) bar and subsequently alloyed with the Mo. The in-situ reduction of FeO in the shocked molten basalt implies that shock-induced reduction of impact melt should be considered a viable mechanism for the formation of metallic phases. Similar metallic phases may form during impact accretion of planets and in impacted material found on the lunar surface and near terrestrial impact craters. In particular, the minute, isolated Fe particles found in lunar soils may have formed by such a process. Furthermore, the metallic spheres within the shocked glass have a globular texture similar to the textures of metallic spheroids from lunar samples and the estimated, slow cooling rate of ⩽ 140°C/s for our spheres is consistent with the interpretation that the lunar spheroids formed by slow cooling within a melted target.

Additional Information

© 1994 Elsevier Science B.V. Received February 5, 1993; revision accepted January 20, 1993. Available online 22 October 2002. We appreciate the helpful advice and comments from Edward Stolper and John Beckett. We acknowledge the technical support of Papo GeUe, Michael Long and Paul Carpenter. The MORB sample was kindly provided to us by John Delaney. This work was supported by NASA and NSF. This is contribution 5089 of the Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, Caltech.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023