Literature DB >> 11539387

X-ray digital imaging petrography of lunar mare soils: modal analyses of minerals and glasses.

L A Taylor1, A Patchen, D H Taylor, J G Chambers, D S McKay.   

Abstract

It is essential that accurate modal (i.e., volume) percentages of the various mineral and glass phases in lunar soils be used for addressing and resolving the effects of space weathering upon reflectance spectra, as well as for their calibration such data are also required for evaluating the resource potential of lunar minerals for use at a lunar base. However, these data are largely lacking. Particle-counting information for lunar soils, originally obtained to study formational processes, does not provide these necessary data, including the percentages of minerals locked in multi-phase lithic fragments and fused-soil particles, such as agglutinates. We have developed a technique for modal analyses, sensu stricto, of lunar soils, using digital imaging of X-ray maps obtained with an energy-dispersive spectrometer mounted on an electron microprobe. A suite of nine soils (90 to 150 micrometers size fraction) from the Apollo 11, 12, 15, and 17 mare sites was used for this study. This is the first collection of such modal data on soils from all Apollo mare sites. The abundances of free-mineral fragments in the mare soils are greater for immature and submature soils than for mature soils, largely because of the formation of agglutinitic glass as maturity progresses. In considerations of resource utilization at a lunar base, the best lunar soils to use for mineral beneficiation (i.e., most free-mineral fragments) have maturities near the immature/submature boundary (Is/FeO approximately or = 30), not the mature soils with their complications due to extensive agglutination. The particle data obtained from the nine mare soils confirm the generalizations for lunar soils predicted by L.A. Taylor and D.S. McKay (1992, Lunar Planet Sci. Conf. 23rd, pp. 1411-1412 [Abstract]).

Keywords:  NASA Center JSC; NASA Discipline Exobiology

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Year:  1996        PMID: 11539387     DOI: 10.1006/icar.1996.0226

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Icarus        ISSN: 0019-1035            Impact factor:   3.508


  3 in total

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

Authors:  Mahesh Anand; Lawrence A Taylor; Mikhail A Nazarov; J Shu; H-K Mao; Russell J Hemley
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2004-04-26       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  In situ detection of water on the Moon by the Chang'E-5 lander.

Authors:  Honglei Lin; Shuai Li; Rui Xu; Yang Liu; Xing Wu; Wei Yang; Yong Wei; Yangting Lin; Zhiping He; Hejiu Hui; Huaiyu He; Sen Hu; Chi Zhang; Chunlai Li; Gang Lv; Liyin Yuan; Yongliao Zou; Chi Wang
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2022-01-07       Impact factor: 14.136

3.  Spectral interpretation of late-stage mare basalt mineralogy unveiled by Chang'E-5 samples.

Authors:  Dawei Liu; Xing Wang; Jianjun Liu; Bin Liu; Xin Ren; Yuan Chen; Zhaopeng Chen; Hongbo Zhang; Guangliang Zhang; Qin Zhou; Zhoubin Zhang; Qiang Fu; Chunlai Li
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-10-10       Impact factor: 17.694

  3 in total

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