Geochemical constraints on the link between lunar magma ocean cumulates and the source of Chang'E-5 basalts from olivine trace element abundances

Chang'E-5 Lunar magma ocean Olivine FRTE
["Wu, Yong","Jing, Jie-Jun","Li, Zi-Ying","Qin, Ming-Kuan","Su, Ben-Xun","Zhong, Jun","Guo, Dong-Fa","Fan, Guang","Liu, Rui-Ping","He, Sheng","Li, Ting","Ge, Xiang-Kun","Li, Jun-Jie","Huang, Zhi-Xin","Deng, Liu-Min","Tai, Zhong-Yao","Yu, Apeng","van Westrenen, Wim"] 2025-04-01 期刊论文
Chang'E-5 samples provide unique insights into the composition of the lunar interior similar to 2 billion years ago, but geochemical models of their formation show a significant degree of discrepancy. Trace element abundance measurements in olivine grains in Chang'E-5 sub-sample CE5C0600YJFM002GP provide additional constraints on the basalt source. Geochemical modeling indicates that low-degree (4 %) batch melting of an olivine-pyroxenite lunar magma ocean cumulate, incorporating high levels of trapped lunar magma ocean liquid and plagioclase, can reproduce the rare earth element, Sr, Rb, Sc, Co and Ni abundances in our and previously reported Chang'E-5 samples, as well as observed Rb-Sr and Sm-Nd isotope systematics. Overall, these results strengthen the direct geochemical links between lunar magma ocean evolution and basaltic volcanism occurring similar to 2.5 billion years later. Additionally, Chang'E-5 high-Fo olivine is enriched in the volatile element Ge (1.38-3.94 mu g/g) by similar to 2 orders of magnitude compared to modeled results (< 0.02 mu g/g). As Ge is a mildly compatible element with bulk Ge partition coefficients close to 1, a Ge-depleted initial LMO proposed by previous research cannot yield a high-Ge mantle source for Chang'E-5 basalt, even when invoking assimilation of high-Ge LMO cumulates. The overabundance of Ge requires either a high-Ge, volatile rich initial bulk Moon with chondritic composition or a late Ge chloride vapor-phase metasomatism.
来源平台:ICARUS