ABSTRACT
The lunar picritic volcanic glasses have been identified as being quenched
samples of primary magmas extruded onto the lunar surface via fire-fountains.
The study of the composition of these glasses is of extreme importance
for the understanding of the Moon's mantle composition and petrogenetic
processes.
Based on their chemical signature (low-Ti and high Mg#) and physical
characteristics, the lunar picritic glasses are believed to represent primary
magmas. Experimental data suggest that these melts formed at 360-500 km
depth (18-25 kbar) in the lunar mantle, and were transported onto the lunar
surface through a "channel" network (McKenzie, 1985b) that isolated these
magmas and minimized fractionation. The aim of this work is to obtain high
precision electron microprobe analysis in order to more confidently model
melting processes that may have occurred deep within the lunar mantle.
For this study, Apollo 14 volcanic green glasses A and B were analyzed.
These glasses (A and B) show large enrichments of incompatible elements
(e.g. K, Na, Ti) and an intragroup trend that does not follow olivine (olivine
is known to be the liquidus phase for all pressures less than about 20
kbar), low-Ca pyroxene, augite or plagioclase fractionation trends. Although
batch melting, mantle source hybridization and/or assimilation of KREEP
in the magma source region have been considered, these processes fail to
explain the behavior of major elements.
More recently, it has been suggested (Delano, 1996; Delano and Fernandes,
1998) that the trends observed reflect deep-seated magmatic processes resulting
from dynamic melting of an ascending mantle diapir (Delano and Fernandes,
1998). This model, the dynamic partial melting process, involves the differential
flow of melt and residual matrix (Eggins, 1992). In the melt region, the
degree of melting will increase as a function of decompression, therefore
of height above the adiabat and peridotite (source) solidus intersection.
The amount of melt present (i.e. porosity) at a particular height, however
will be less than the degree of melting due to the more rapid buoyancy-driven
ascent of melt compared to the matrix. The magnitude of this melt-filled
porosity (phi) will depend upon the velocity of the melt relative to the
matrix and upon the rate of melting. The amount of melt created will dictate
the abundance of elements in a specific melt fraction.
Based on dynamic melting modeling, the degree of partial melting involved
in the origin of these melts (the glasses) is within the range of values
(5 to 25%) expected for conventional petrogenetic processes (e.g. batch
melting). The model results for Al, Ca, K, Na, and Ti show a wide range
of porosity and distribution coefficients that may have been involved in
the origin of these melts. The little sensitivity to the model shown by
K and Na suggest that these two elements are important in the identification
of the degree of partial melting undergone by the source mantle diapir.
These two elements may provide important information that will allow all
of the other elements, including Ti, to be better constrained in the model.
Vera Assis Fernandes, V.A., 1999. Major- and minor-element analysis
of Apollo 14 volcanic green glasses B, and petrogenic modeling of Apollo
14 green glasses A and B. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of
New York at Albany. 147 pp., +xi
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 40 Z899 1999 F47
Return to MS Theses completed in the Geological
Sciences Program, University at Albany