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Clementine observations of the Aristarchus region of the moon

January 1, 1994

Multispectral and topographic data acquired by the Clementine spacecraft provide information on the composition and geologic history of the Aristarchus region of the moon. Altimetry profiles show the Aristarchus plateau dipping about 1?? to the north-northwest and rising about 2 kilometers above the surrounding lavas of Oceanus Procellarum to the south. Dark, reddish pyroclastic glass covers the plateau to average depths of 10 to 30 meters, as determined from the estimated excavation depths of 100- to 1000-meter-diameter craters that have exposed materials below the pyroclastics. These craters and the wall of sinuous rilles also show that mare basalts underlie the pyroclastics across much of the plateau. Near-infrared images of Aristarchus crater reveal oilvine-rich materials and two kilometer-sized outcrops of anorthosite in the central peaks. The anorthosite could be either a derivative of local magnesium-suite magmatism or a remnant of the ferroan anorthosite crust that formed over the primordial magma ocean.

Publication Year 1994
Title Clementine observations of the Aristarchus region of the moon
Authors A. S. McEwen, M.S. Robinson, E. M. Eliason, P. G. Lucey, T. C. Duxbury, P. D. Spudis
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Science
Index ID 70016580
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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