Metal impact and vaporization on the Moon's surface: Nano‐geochemical insights into the source of lunar metals

Author:

Gopon Phillip123,Douglas James O.34,Gardner Hazel35,Moody Michael P.3,Wood Bernard2,Halliday Alexander N.26,Wade Jon2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Geosciences and Geophysics University of Leoben Leoben Austria

2. Department of Earth Science University of Oxford Oxford UK

3. Department of Materials University of Oxford Oxford UK

4. Department of Materials Imperial College London London UK

5. Culham Science Centre UK Atomic Energy Authority Abingdon UK

6. Earth Institute Columbia University New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractMillimeter‐to‐nanometer‐sized iron‐ and nickel‐rich metals are ubiquitous on the lunar surface. The proposed origin of these metals falls into two broad classes which should have distinct geochemical signatures—(1) the reduction of iron‐bearing minerals or (2) the addition of metals from meteoritic sources. The metals measured here from the Apollo 16 regolith possess low Ni (2–6 wt%) and elevated Ge (80–350 ppm) suggesting a meteoritic origin. However, the measured Ni is lower, and the Ge higher than currently known iron meteorites. In comparison to the low Ni iron meteorites, the even lower Ni and higher Ge contents exhibited by these lunar metals are best explained by impact‐driven volatilization and condensation of Ni‐poor meteoritic metal during their impact and addition to the lunar surface. The presence of similar, low Ni‐bearing metals in Apollo return samples from geographically distant sites suggests that this geochemical signature might not be restricted to just the Apollo 16 locality and that volatility‐driven modification of meteoritic metals are a common feature of lunar regolith formation. The possibility of a significant low Ni/high Ge meteoritic component in the lunar regolith, and the observation of chemical fractionation during emplacement, has implications for the interpretation of both lunar remote‐sensing data and bulk geochemical data derived from sample return material. Additionally, our observation of predominantly meteoritic sourced metals has implications for the prevalence of meteoritic addition on airless planetary bodies.

Funder

Wisconsin Space Grant Consortium

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Reference82 articles.

1. Space weathering on airless planetary bodies: Clues from the lunar mineral hapkeite

2. Grain Size Frequency Distribution and Modal Analysis of Apollo 16 Fines;Butler J. C.;4th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference,1973

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