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On compositional variations among lunar anorthosites.
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1982
Year
Magmatic ProcessVolcanologyEngineeringMagmatismIgneous PetrogenesisFerroan AnorthositeGeologyLunar ScienceGeochemistrySubstantial FanChemistryLunar AnorthositesPetrologyMineral GeochemistryIgneous ProcessEarth ScienceFan ParentTectonics
Ferroan anorthosite (FAN) is the most abundant 'pristine' highlands igneous rock in the Apollo sample collection. The presence of substantial FAN in the lunar crust is one argument used in favor of a global magma ocean on which crystallizing plagioclase could float. Information about the composition of the proposed magma ocean or whatever liquids might have been parental to FAN is sparse. As a first step toward learning about the nature of the FAN parent and the processes by which FAN attained its compositional characteristics, attention is given to the concentrations for a number of major and trace elements whose behavior during magmatic processes is somewhat understood. Serious difficulties are found with both FAN and the Marcy anorthosite in interpreting incompatible trace element concentrations in the plagioclases or the whole rocks in terms of residues from parent liquids. A description is presented of the nature of these difficulties.