Highly Silicic Compositions on the Moon Glotch et al. Presented by Mark Popinchalk.

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Highly Silicic Compositions on the Moon Glotch et al. Presented by Mark Popinchalk

Transcript of Highly Silicic Compositions on the Moon Glotch et al. Presented by Mark Popinchalk.

Highly Silicic Compositions on the Moon

Glotch et al.

Presented by Mark Popinchalk

The Moon!

• Red spots– Deep UV w/ respect to NIR, low FeO and TiO2

concentrations• Feldspathic magmas with high silica contents• UV/Visible/NIR/GRS directly sensitive to silicic

volcanism• Most silicic areas Anorthite

Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment

• Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter• 7.8, 8.25, 8.55 µm• Compared Mid IR spectra shapes; Red Spots vs

surrounding mare and highlands• Data covers all Red Spots

Christiansen Function

• Directly sensitive to silicate mineralogy– Bulk Si02

• Convoluted with Laboratory Spectra : Concavity, curvature, strong positive slope– Show silicate content

• I – slope between 3,4• c – concavity from 3-5

• Most-silicic strong concave up

• Concave down, positive I is a mix

• Mare and Highlands, negative concave, negative slope

• CF – Mare = 8.33– Highlands = 8.19

• Concavity Index on Lunar Orbiter IV image• More Red,

more Silicic

Silicon, or Silicoff?

• Red Spots with CF shorter than anorthite, positive I and c– Quartz, Si rich glass, alkali feldspars

• Hansteen Alpha, Lassel Massif, Gruithusien Domes, rim/ejecta Aristarchus Crater– High Si, evolved lithologies

• Helmet Feature, Montes Riphaeus indistinguishable

Theories

• Represent both Extrusive and Intrusive igneous processes.

• Gruithuisen Domes/Hansteen Alpha– Previously proposed silicic volcanic constructs• Diviner consistent with extrusive volcanic process

• Aristarchus/Lassell appear to be silicic lithologies at depth– Craters revealing plutonic or pyroclastic deposits

• A), D) Impacts reveal silicic below• B), C)

Volcanic formation• D) Nothing

Extrusive Silicic Volcanism

• Gruithuisen Domes/Hansteen Alpha• Occurred Late Imbrian epoch– Before mare volcanism

• Crystals in Apollo Rocks– Crystallization ages that span 500 million years

• Silicate Immiscibility?• Granitic Plutons– Slow crystalization late stage magma

• Prevent large extrusive features -> revealed

Basaltic Underplating

• Hot basaltic magma intrudes into lunar crust– Melting of crust, generate silicic magmas– Buoyant, rise as rhyolite plumes

• Thin curst, heat producing elements, basalitic magmatisim in PKT

Conclusions

• 4 distinctly different geologies.• Gruithusien Domes/Hansteen Alpha– Extrusive silicic volancism

• Aristarchus/Lassell– Impact craters reveal silicic plutons at depth

• Multiple igneous processes over time– With silicic results