The earliest Lunar Magma Ocean differentiation recorded in Fe isotopes

  • Kun Wang
  • , Stein B. Jacobsen
  • , Fatemeh Sedaghatpour
  • , Heng Chen
  • , Randy L. Korotev

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recent high-precision isotopic measurements show that the isotopic similarity of Earth and Moon is unique among all known planetary bodies in our Solar System. These observations provide fundamental constraints on the origin of Earth-Moon system, likely a catastrophic Giant Impact event. However, in contrast to the isotopic composition of many elements (. e.g., O, Mg, Si, K, Ti, Cr, and W), the Fe isotopic compositions of all lunar samples are significantly different from those of the bulk silicate Earth. Such a global Fe isotopic difference between the Moon and Earth provides an important constraint on the lunar formation - such as the amount of Fe evaporation as a result of a Giant Impact origin of the Moon. Here, we show through high-precision Fe isotopic measurements of one of the oldest lunar rocks (4.51. ±. 0.10 Gyr dunite 72415), compared with Fe isotope results of other lunar samples from the Apollo program, and lunar meteorites, that the lunar dunite is enriched in light Fe isotopes, complementing the heavy Fe isotope enrichment in other lunar samples. Thus, the earliest olivine accumulation in the Lunar Magma Ocean may have been enriched in light Fe isotopes. This new observation allows the Fe isotopic composition of the bulk silicate Moon to be identical to that of the bulk silicate Earth, by balancing light Fe in the deep Moon with heavy Fe in the shallow Moon rather than the Moon having a heavier Fe isotope composition than Earth as a result of Giant Impact vaporization.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)202-208
Number of pages7
JournalEarth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume430
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 15 2015

Keywords

  • Giant Impact
  • Iron isotopes
  • Lunar Magma Ocean theory
  • Origin of the Moon

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