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Mineralogy and geochemistry of lunar meteorite Queen Alexandra Range 93069
Author(s) -
KOEBERL Christian,
KURAT Gero,
BRANDSTÄTTER Franz
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
meteoritics and planetary science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.09
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1945-5100
pISSN - 1086-9379
DOI - 10.1111/j.1945-5100.1996.tb02123.x
Subject(s) - anorthosite , geology , geochemistry , breccia , mafic , meteorite , regolith , gabbro , olivine , geology of the moon , pyroxene , mineralogy , plagioclase , igneous rock , astrobiology , basalt , quartz , paleontology , physics
— Queen Alexandra Range (QUE) 93069 is a glass‐rich regolith breccia derived from the lunar highlands. The high abundance of glassy fragments, the presence of agglutinates, the small size of all mineral and glass fragments, the presence of mostly melt rocks, and the low abundance of pristine lunar crustal rocks, all indicate that QUE 93069 is derived from a mature regolith. This conclusion is also supported by its high siderophile element content. The most common mafic mineral is pyroxene, with compositions that indicate derivation from ferroan ANT suite rocks. Rare gabbro differentiation products may be indicated by the presence of silica, fayalitic olivine, and one pyroxferroite grain. Lithic fragments are mostly meta‐melt rocks of ANT composition. The glass compositions are dominated by troctolitic anorthosite compositions, followed by gabbroic anorthosite and noritic anorthosite. Most glasses are ol‐normative in composition. Some rare basic glasses of noritic composition were observed. Glass fragments and matrix glasses are alkali‐poor, except for some rare alkali‐rich shards. The bulk chemical composition of QUE 93069, as well as the rare‐earth‐element (REE) abundance pattern, is very similar to that of other highlands meteorites, such as MAC 88105 and Y‐86032 and to average lunar highlands crust. One small porous clast was found to be very rich in volatile elements, as well as in most lithophile and siderophile elements. As this sample also contains abundant sulfides, the enrichments could be related to element mobilization and redistribution by volatile sulfur species.