A Raman Spectroscopic and Microimage Analysis Perspective of the Chang'e-5 Lunar Samples

被引:33
作者
Cao, Haijun [1 ]
Wang, Chen [2 ]
Chen, Jian [1 ]
Che, Xiaochao [2 ]
Fu, Xiaohui [1 ,3 ]
Shi, Yuruo [2 ]
Liu, Dunyi [2 ]
Ling, Zongcheng [1 ,3 ]
Qiao, Le [1 ]
Lu, Xuejin [1 ]
Qi, Xiaobin [1 ]
Yin, Chengxiang [1 ]
Liu, Ping [1 ]
Liu, Changqing [1 ]
Xin, Yanqing [1 ]
Liu, Jianzhong [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Shandong Univ, Inst Space Sci, Sch Space Sci & Phys, Shandong Prov Key Lab Opt Astron & Solar Terr Env, Weihai, Peoples R China
[2] Chinese Acad Geol Sci, Inst Geol, Beijing SHRIMP Ctr, Beijing, Peoples R China
[3] Chinese Acad Sci, CAS Ctr Excellence Comparat Planetol, Hefei, Peoples R China
[4] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geochem, Guiyang, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金; 中国博士后科学基金;
关键词
SURFACE; METEORITES; CRUST; MOON; PETROGENESIS; MINERALOGY; MAGMATISM; SOILS;
D O I
10.1029/2022GL099282
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The Chang'e-5 (CE-5) materials represent the youngest returned lunar samples. We performed a detailed Raman spectroscopic survey (1259-point Raman modal analysis) to evaluate the mineralogical characteristics of CE-5 soils, constraining the source materials and shock effects of these unique samples. The mineral chemistry (e.g., Mg#(3-)(60) for mafic minerals) and modal abundance (first distinguishing basaltic and feldspathic glasses) of CE-5 mare soils are different from those of Apollo high- and low-Ti basalts, possibly representing an intermediate-Ti mare basalt. The occurrence of minor Mg-rich materials (Mg# > 70) provides evidence of contamination from similar to 5% to 7% exogenous materials, possibly related to Mg-suite rocks. The microimage analyses suggest that the CE-5 soils are fine-grained, mature, and unimodal particle-size distribution, highlighting that micrometeorite reworking dominates the CE-5 regolith evolution with minor mixing from nonmare materials. The pressure-sensitive minerals (quartz and maskelynite) indicate that 17-25.8 GPa shock pressures might be the higher limit in a relatively young lunar terrain. Plain Language Summary The returned Chang'e-5 (CE-5) samples from one of the youngest mare units in northern Oceanus Procellarum on the Moon provide vital clues about late lunar thermal evolution and post deposition processes (e.g., space weathering and mixing effects) on the lunar surface, presenting quite different chemistry from typical Apollo soils. The mineralogy, geochemistry, and chorology of CE-5 samples have been done, while new knowledge on the noncrystalline and pressure-sensitive phases, as well as nonmare materials in the soils, is still insufficient. Here, we report the mineralogic characteristics of CE-5 soils using Raman spectroscopy. Our results suggest the closest affinities in composition and modal mineralogy among the CE-5 materials but distinct from Apollo mare soils, possibly representing a new type of mare basalt (intermediate-Ti) with a minor amount (similar to 5%-7%) of exogenous contribution. The intermediate-Ti CE-5 samples have similar mineralogy and composition to the Chang'e-3 basalts, erupting in the same volcanic episode and representing the latest lunar magmatism near 2.0 Ga in the Procellarum KREEP Terrane. We constrained relatively weaker shock pressures of the CE-5 samples than Apollo highland materials. The CE-5 soils can help establish a new "ground truth" for mineralogical and compositional investigations of the lunar global surface.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 62 条
  • [1] Baedecker P. A., 1975, P 6 LUNAR SCI C
  • [2] Mechanisms for incompatible-element enrichment on the Moon deduced from the lunar basaltic meteorite Northwest Africa 032
    Borg, Lars E.
    Gaffney, Amy M.
    Shearer, Charles K.
    DePaolo, Donald J.
    Hutcheon, Ian D.
    Owens, Thomas L.
    Ramon, Erick
    Brennecka, Greg
    [J]. GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2009, 73 (13) : 3963 - 3980
  • [3] Prolonged KREEP magmatism on the Moon indicated by the youngest dated lunar igneous rock
    Borg, LE
    Shearer, CK
    Asmerom, Y
    Papike, JJ
    [J]. NATURE, 2004, 432 (7014) : 209 - 211
  • [4] Age and composition of young basalts on the Moon, measured from samples returned by Chang'e-5
    Che, Xiaochao
    Nemchin, Alexander
    Liu, Dunyi
    Long, Tao
    Wang, Chen
    Norman, Marc D.
    Joy, Katherine H.
    Tartese, Romain
    Head, James
    Jolliff, Bradley
    Snape, Joshua F.
    Neal, Clive R.
    Whitehouse, Martin J.
    Crow, Carolyn
    Benedix, Gretchen
    Jourdan, Fred
    Yang, Zhiqing
    Yang, Chun
    Liu, Jianhui
    Xie, Shiwen
    Bao, Zemin
    Fan, Runlong
    Li, Dapeng
    Li, Zengsheng
    Webb, Stuart G.
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2021, 374 (6569) : 887 - +
  • [5] Petrogenesis and Shock Metamorphism of Basaltic Lunar Meteorites Northwest Africa 4734 and 10597
    Chen, J.
    Jolliff, B. L.
    Wang, A.
    Korotev, R. L.
    Wang, K.
    Carpenter, P. K.
    Chen, H.
    Ling, Z.
    Fu, X.
    Ni, Y.
    Cao, H.
    Huang, Y.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS, 2019, 124 (10) : 2583 - 2598
  • [6] Evolved mare basalt magmatism, high Mg/Fe feldspathic crust, chondritic impactors, and the petrogenesis of Antarctic lunar breccia meteorites Meteorite Hills 01210 and Pecora Escarpment 02007
    Day, James M. D.
    Floss, Christine
    Taylor, Lawrence A.
    Anand, Mahesh
    Patchen, Allan D.
    [J]. GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2006, 70 (24) : 5957 - 5989
  • [7] PRISTINE LUNAR GLASSES - CRITERIA, DATA, AND IMPLICATIONS
    DELANO, JW
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH AND PLANETS, 1986, 91 (B4): : D201 - D213
  • [8] CHARACTERIZATION OF NATURAL FELDSPARS BY RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY FOR FUTURE PLANETARY EXPLORATION
    Freeman, John J.
    Wang, Alian
    Kuebler, Karla E.
    Jolliff, Bradley L.
    Haskin, Larry A.
    [J]. CANADIAN MINERALOGIST, 2008, 46 (06) : 1477 - 1500
  • [9] Gatehouse B., 1977, P 8 LUNAR SCI C
  • [10] On the chronology of lunar origin and evolution Implications for Earth, Mars and the Solar System as a whole
    Geiss, Johannes
    Rossi, Angelo Pio
    [J]. ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS REVIEW, 2013, 21