by Jim Erickson
February 17, 2013
from
UniversityOfMichigan Website
Called the "Genesis Rock," this lunar sample
of unbrecciated anorthosite collected during
the Apollo 15 mission was thought to be a
piece of the moon's primordial crust.
In a paper published online Feb. 17 in
Nature Geoscience, a University of Michigan
researcher and his colleagues report that
traces of water were found in the rock.
Photo courtesy of NASA/Johnson Space Center
ANN ARBOR
Traces of water have been detected
within the crystalline structure of mineral samples from the lunar
highland upper crust obtained during
the Apollo missions, according
to a University of Michigan researcher and his colleagues.
The lunar highlands are thought to represent the original crust,
crystallized from a magma ocean on a mostly molten early moon. The
new findings indicate that the early moon was wet and that water
there was not substantially lost during the moon's formation.
The results seem to contradict the predominant lunar formation
theory - that the moon was formed from debris generated during a
giant impact between Earth and another planetary body, approximately
the size of Mars, according to U-M's Youxue Zhang and his
colleagues.
"Because these are some of the
oldest rocks from the moon, the water is inferred to have been
in the moon when it formed," Zhang said.
"That is somewhat
difficult to explain with the current popular moon-formation
model, in which the moon formed by collecting the hot ejecta as
the result of a super-giant impact of a martian-size body with
the proto-Earth.
"Under that model, the hot ejecta should have been degassed
almost completely, eliminating all water," Zhang said.
A paper titled "Water
in Lunar Anorthosites and Evidence for a Wet Early Moon"
was published online Feb. 17 in the journal Nature Geoscience.
The first author is Hejiu Hui,
postdoctoral research associate of civil and environmental
engineering and earth sciences at the University of Notre Dame. Hui
received his doctorate at U-M under Zhang, a professor in the
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences and one of three
co-authors of the Nature Geoscience paper.
Over the last five years, spacecraft observations and new lab
measurements of Apollo lunar samples have overturned the long-held
belief that the moon is bone-dry.
In 2008, laboratory measurement of Apollo lunar samples by ion
microprobe detected indigenous hydrogen, inferred to be the
water-related chemical species hydroxyl, in lunar volcanic glasses.
In 2009, NASA's Lunar Crater
Observation and Sensing satellite, known as
LCROSS, slammed into a permanently
shadowed lunar crater and ejected a plume of material that was
surprisingly rich in water ice.
Hydroxyls have also been detected in other volcanic rocks and in the
lunar regolith, the layer of fine powder and rock fragments that
coats the lunar surface. Hydroxyls, which consist of one atom of
hydrogen and one of oxygen, were also detected in the lunar
anorthosite study reported in
Nature Geoscience.
In the latest work, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy was used
to analyze the water content in grains of plagioclase feldspar from
lunar anorthosites, highland rocks composed of more than 90 percent
plagioclase.
The bright-colored highlands rocks are
thought to have formed early in the moon's history when plagioclase
crystallized from a magma ocean and floated to the surface.
The infrared spectroscopy work, which was conducted at Zhang's U-M
lab and co-author Anne H. Peslier's lab, detected about 6
parts per million of water in the lunar anorthosites.
"The surprise discovery of this work
is that in lunar rocks, even in nominally water-free minerals
such as plagioclase feldspar, the water content can be
detected," said Zhang, James R. O'Neil Collegiate Professor of
Geological Sciences.
"It's not 'liquid' water that was measured during these studies
but hydroxyl groups distributed within the mineral grain," said
Notre Dame's Hui. "We are able to detect those hydroxyl groups
in the crystalline structure of the Apollo samples."
The hydroxyl groups the team detected
are evidence that the lunar interior contained significant water
during the moon's early molten state, before the crust solidified,
and may have played a key role in the development of lunar basalts.
"The presence of water," said Hui,
"could imply a more prolonged solidification of the lunar magma
ocean than the once-popular anhydrous moon scenario suggests."
The researchers analyzed grains from
lunar ferroan anorthosite 15415 and
60015, as well as
troctolite 76535.
Ferroan anorthosite 15415 is one the
best known rocks of the Apollo collection and is popularly called
the
Genesis Rock because the astronauts thought they had a piece of
the moon's primordial crust. It was collected on the rim of Apur
Crater during the Apollo 15 mission.
Rock 60015 is highly shocked ferroan anorthosite collected near the
lunar module during the
Apollo 16 mission. Troctolite 76535
is a coarse-grained plutonic rock collected during the Apollo 17
mission.
Co-author Peslier is at Jacobs Technology and NASA's Johnson Space
Center. The fourth author of the Nature Geoscience paper, Clive R.
Neal, is a professor of civil and environmental engineering and
earth sciences at the University of Notre Dame.
The work was supported by NASA.
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