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Petrology and geochemistry of feldspathic impact-melt breccia Abar al' Uj 012, the first lunar meteorite from Saudi Arabia

Authors :
Pierre Lanari
Siddiq N. Habibullah
A. J. Timothy Jull
Randy L. Korotev
Marianna Mészáros
Edwin Gnos
Khalid Al-Wagdani
Ayman Mahjoub
Abdulaziz A. Al-Solami
Nicolas D. Greber
Ingo Leya
Beda A. Hofmann
Richard C. Greenwood
Source :
Meteoritics and Planetary Science
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wiley, 2016.

Abstract

Abar al' Uj (AaU) 012 is a clast-rich, vesicular impact-melt (IM) breccia, composed of lithic and mineral clasts set in a very fine-grained and well-crystallized matrix. It is a typical feldspathic lunar meteorite, most likely originating from the lunar farside. Bulk composition (31.0 wt% Al2O3, 3.85wt% FeO) is close to the mean of feldspathic lunar meteorites and Apollo FAN-suite rocks. The low concentration of incompatible trace elements (0.39ppmTh, 0.13ppm U) reflects the absence of a significant KREEP component. Plagioclase is highly anorthitic with a mean of An(96.9)Ab(3.0)Or(0.1). Bulk rock Mg# is 63 and molar FeO/MnO is 76. The terrestrial age of the meteorite is 33.4 +/- 5.2kyr. AaU 012 contains a similar to 1.4x1.5mm(2) exotic clast different from the lithic clast population which is dominated by clasts of anorthosite breccias. Bulk composition and presence of relatively large vesicles indicate that the clast was most probably formed by an impact into a precursor having nonmare igneous origin most likely related to the rare alkali-suite rocks. The IM clast is mainly composed of clinopyroxenes, contains a significant amount of cristobalite (9.0 vol%), and has a microcrystalline mesostasis. Although the clast shows similarities in texture and modal mineral abundances with some Apollo pigeonite basalts, it has lower FeO and higher SiO2 than any mare basalt. It also has higher FeO and lower Al2O3 than rocks from the FAN- or Mg-suite. Its lower Mg# (59) compared to Mg-suite rocks also excludes a relationship with these types of lunar material.

Details

ISSN :
10869379
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Meteoritics & Planetary Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ac77f25585d31c9774cf4ccbad8dd30e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.12693