ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION OF ZINC, COPPER, AND IRON IN LUNAR SAMPLES

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dc.contributor.author Moynier F.
dc.contributor.author Albar?de F.
dc.contributor.author Herzog G.F.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-04-20T09:00:47Z
dc.date.available 2024-04-20T09:00:47Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=12091584
dc.identifier.citation Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 2006, 70, 24, 6103-6117
dc.identifier.issn 0016-7037
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/43724
dc.description.abstract We determined by ICP-MS the concentrations and isotopic ratios of Fe, Cu, and Zn in the Ti-rich lunar basalt 74275, in the lunar orange glass 74220, and in up to 10 lunar soils, namely, 14163, 15231, 64501, 66041, 68841, 69941, 70011, 72501, 75081, and 76501. Two analyses of zinc in lunar basalt 74275 give ?66Zn = 0.17? and 0.75?, values within the range of those measured in terrestrial basalts; copper in lunar basalt 74275 has ?65Cu ? +1.4?, which is isotopically heavier than values observed in terrestrial basalts. In the orange glass, we measured ?56Fe = -0.24?, ?65Cu = -0.42?, and ?66Zn ? -3.6?. These values of ? are more negative than those obtained for 74275 and for typical lunar basalts, but for Cu, comparable to those observed in terrestrial sulfides and meteorites. In lunar soils we found 0.11? ? ?56Fe ? 0.51?, 2.6? ? ?65Cu ? 4.5?, and 2.2? ? ?66Zn ? 6.4?. Insofar as we can generalize from a small sample set, S, Fe, Cu, Zn, and Cd show similar trends in isotopic fractionation on the Moon. Lunar basalts have nearly terrestrial isotopic ratios. Relative to the lunar basalt 74275, the pyroclastic glass 74220 is enriched in the lighter isotopes of Fe, Cu, and Zn, and the soils are enriched in the heavier isotopes of Fe, Cu, and Zn. The patterns in the basalts are likely inherited from the source material; the light-isotope enrichments seen in the orange glass originated during lava fountaining or, less probably, during partial condensation of vapor; and the heavy-isotope enrichments in the lunar soils were likely created by a combination of processes that included micrometeorite vaporization and sputtering. In the orange glass, the light-isotope enrichments (relative to lunar basalts) of Zn are larger than those of Cu. If these enrichments reflect accurately the isotopic composition of the gas, they suggest that Cu is more volatile than Zn in the liquid from which the gas derived. A simple model built on the known flux of micrometeorites to the lunar surface and a published estimate that micrometeorites generate 10 times their own mass of vapor, predicts heavy-isotope enrichments comparable to those observed in soils but only if the regolith gardening rate is set at about one twentieth of the generally accepted value of 1 cm/My. This discrepancy may reflect the difference in the time constants for micrometeorite milling and decimeter-scale gardening, or the importance of sputtering. ? 2006.
dc.subject COPPER
dc.subject INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA METHOD
dc.subject IRON
dc.subject ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION
dc.subject LUNAR SOIL
dc.subject MASS SPECTROMETRY
dc.subject ZINC
dc.title ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION OF ZINC, COPPER, AND IRON IN LUNAR SAMPLES
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.gca.2006.02.030


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