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Neodymium Isotope Evidence for a Chondritic Composition of the Moon
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Citations
28
References
2006
Year
EngineeringNeodymium Isotope EvidenceEarth ScienceLunar ScienceGeochronologyMeteoriticsIsotope AnalysisMagmatismIgneous PetrogenesisGeologySamarium-neodymium Isotope DataMantle GeochemistryIsotope GeochemistryEconomic GeologyBulk MoonEarth SciencesGeochemistryCrust-mantle InteractionSolar System Condensation
Samarium-neodymium isotope data for six lunar basalts show that the bulk Moon has a 142Nd/144Nd ratio that is indistinguishable from that of chondritic meteorites but is 20 parts per million less than most samples from Earth. The Sm/Nd formation interval of the lunar mantle from these data is 215(-21)(+23) million years after the onset of solar system condensation. Because both Earth and the Moon likely formed in the same region of the solar nebula, Earth should also have a chondritic bulk composition. In order to mass balance the Nd budget, these constraints require that a complementary reservoir with a lower 142Nd/144Nd value resides in Earth's mantle.
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