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Shock-induced microtextures in lunar apatite and merrillite

A. Ä ernok
•
Lee Francis White
•
James Darling
altro
Mahesh Anand
2019
  • journal article

Periodico
METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE
Abstract
Apatite and merrillite are the most common phosphate minerals in a wide range of planetary materials and are key accessory phases for in situ age dating, as well as for determination of the volatile abundances and their isotopic composition. Although most lunar and meteoritic samples show at least some evidence of impact metamorphism, relatively little is known about how these two phosphates respond to shock-loading. In this work, we analyzed a set of well-studied lunar highlands samples (Apollo 17 Mg-suite rocks 76535, 76335, 72255, 78235, and 78236), in order of displaying increasing shock deformation stages from S1 to S6. We determined the stage of shock deformation of the rock based on existing plagioclase shock-pressure barometry using optical microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and SEM-based panchromatic cathodoluminescence (CL) imaging of plagioclase. We then inspected the microtexture of apatite and merrillite through an integrated study of Raman spectroscopy, SEM-CL imaging, and electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD). EBSD analyses revealed that microtextures in apatite and merrillite become progressively more complex and deformed with increasing levels of shock-loading. An early shock-stage fragmentation at S1 and S2 is followed by subgrain formation from S2 onward, showing consistent decrease in subgrain size with increasing level of deformation (up to S5) and finally granularization of grains caused by recrystallization (S6). Starting with 2°–3° of intragrain crystal-plastic deformation in both phosphates at the lowest shock stage, apatite undergoes up to 25° and merrillite up to 30° of crystal-plastic deformation at the highest stage of shock deformation (S5). Merrillite displays lower shock impedance than apatite; hence, it is more deformed at the same level of shock-loading. We suggest that the microtexture of apatite and merrillite visualized by EBSD can be used to evaluate stages of shock deformation and should be taken into account when interpreting in situ geochemically relevant analyses of the phosphates, e.g., age or volatile content, as it has been shown in other accessory minerals that differently shocked domains can yield significantly different ages.
DOI
10.1111/maps.13278
WOS
WOS:000470741600005
Archivio
https://hdl.handle.net/11368/3067176
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-85063404671
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/maps.13278
Diritti
open access
license:copyright editore
license:copyright editore
license uri:iris.pri02
license uri:iris.pri02
FVG url
https://arts.units.it/bitstream/11368/3067176/4/Meteorit Planetary Scien - 2019 - Ä ernok - Shockâ induced microtextures in lunar apatite and merrillite.pdf
Soggetti
  • apatite

  • merrillite

  • microtexture

  • Apollo 17

  • EBSD

  • shock

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