Apollo 15 regolith breccia provides first natural evidence for olivine incongruent melting

The Apollo 15 mission returned various samples of regolith breccias, typical lunar rocks lithified by impact events on the Moon's surface. Here we report our observations on shock features recorded in a section of the Apollo Sample 15299. We observe the presence of ferropericlase crystals confi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe American mineralogist Vol. 107; no. 9; pp. 1661 - 1667
Main Authors Satta, Niccolo, Miyahara, Masaaki, Ozawa, Shin, Marquardt, Hauke, Nishijima, Masahiko, Arai, Tomoko, Ohtani, Eiji
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington Mineralogical Society of America 01.09.2022
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
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Summary:The Apollo 15 mission returned various samples of regolith breccias, typical lunar rocks lithified by impact events on the Moon's surface. Here we report our observations on shock features recorded in a section of the Apollo Sample 15299. We observe the presence of ferropericlase crystals confined in a shock-melt pocket and conclude that their formation is related to a shock-induced incongruent melting of olivine. While predicted by experiments, this phenomenon has never been observed in a natural sample. The incongruent melting of olivine provides an important signature of melting under high-pressure conditions and allows for estimating the pressure-temperature (P-T) experienced by the studied sample during the impact event. We infer that the fracture porosity that likely characterized the studied sample prior to the shock event critically affected the P-T path during the shock compression and allowed the studied sample to be subjected to elevated temperature during relatively low shock pressures.
ISSN:0003-004X
1945-3027
DOI:10.2138/am-2022-8121